Medieval Bhakti Movements in India
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Sri Caitanya Quincentenary Commemoration Committee, Chinsurah

Members

Prof. Kali Chorone Karmocar Dr. Dipak Ranjan Das Dr. Akshay Kumar Adhya Janab Muhiuddin Shaheen Rev, Manoj Ghosh Sri Kartik Chatterjee Sri Ram Roy Sri Dilip Banerjee Smt. Asoka Chatterjee Smt. Manjula Bhattacharyya

Medieval Bhakti Movements in India ^ri Caitanya Quincentenary Commemoration Volume

Edited by N.N. Bhattacharyya

Published on behalf of l5ri Chaitanya Quincentenary Commemoration Committee, Chinsurah

J^tunshiram Mtinoharlal M^ubUshers Pvi, Ltd.

i

ISBN 81-215-0459-1 First published 1989 © 1989, Srj Caitanya Quincentenary Commemoration Committee, Chinsurah

Published by Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers Pvt. Ltd., Post Box 5715, 54 Rani Jhansi Road, New Delhi-110055 and printed at Roopabh Printers, Delhi-110032

Contents

Foreword

vii

Introduction

ix

1. Religion of Love: The Early Medieval Phase {c.

ad

700-1486)

1

Bimanbehari Majumdar

2. The Concept of Sahaj in Guru Nanak’s Theology and its Antecedents

17

Niharranjan Ray

3. Guru Nanak’s Concept of God

36

G.S. Chhabra

4. Guru Nanak and the Bhakti Movement: Convergence and Divergence

47

Manorama Kohli

5. Earliest References to the Bhakti Concept

58

G.V. Saroja

6. The Medieval Bhakti Movement: Its influence on Jainism

62

Jagdishchandra Jain

7. Baba Shaikh Farid: A Harbinger of Hindu-Muslim Unity

74

M.S. Ahluwalia

8. Nature and Roots of Islamic Bhakti Movement and Syed Ashraf Jahangir Samnani

83

Hamid Afaq Qureshi

9. Medieval Bhakti Movements in Gujarat

97

Manjula Bhattacharyya

10. Narasirnha Mehta: Saint-Poet from Gujarat

106

Vma S. Deshpande

11. Saint Prannath and the Pranami Sect

113

P.S. Mukharya

12. Pranami Sampradaya of Bundelkhand

127

Bhagwan Das Gupta

13. Influence of Islam and Sufism on Prannath’s Religious Movement Hafiz Md. Tahir Ali

136

vz

Contents

14. The Life and Mission of Karaikkal Ammaiyar 149 N. Jagadeesan 15. Religion and Social Change in Tamil Nadu (c. ad 600-1300) 162 J!c>-c/upu!er)ra o/ Beligion and Ethics, vol.

'“G.A. Grierson

X, pp. 150-51, quoted in Pyarelal, Mahatma Gandhi, vol. I, p. 214.

12 Pranami Sampradaya of Bundelkhand BHAGWAN DAS GUPTA

Pranami sect or sampradaya of Bundelkhand had its origin in Saurashtra (Kathiawar). Its founder Devchand was born on the 11 October 1581. His father Mattu Mehta, a merchant by profes¬ sion and the mother Kunwarbai both were of a pious disposition. Devchand inherited their traits which later blossomed into an inquisitive mind and a spiritual restlessness. Whenever Devchand accompanied his father on business trips to Kutch and Kathiawar, he tried to mix with the learned people of different religions and obtain answers to his spiritual queries. He studied the holy scrip¬ tures of the Hindus and became conversant with the main tenets the Islam as well. But his young mind was thirsting for more and more. Therefore he left home at the age of sixteen and moved to Bhujpur in Kutch where impressed by the learned discourses of one Haridas Gosain on the Bhdgvata Purdna he became his disciple and joined the Radhavallabh sect which was then widely popular in Kutch and Saurashtra.^ Here Devchand’s parents joined him and somehow managed to marry him with the fond hope to lure him away from the spiritual pursuits, but in vain. In the meantime Haridas Gosain died and Devchand now settled at Jamnagar. Here he came in contact with another priest of the Radhavallabh sect, Kanjahi, whose discourses and learned expositions charmed Devchand to such an extent that he attended them regularly for fourteen years. Devchand’s devotion to Krsna deepened with the passage of time while his serious study of the Bhagvata Piirdtia over a long period gave new dimensions to his spiritual thoughts. A divine grace settled on him and he attained enlightenment at the mature age of forty.^ Devchand now started preaching himself. Themes of the Bliogvata Purdna and the loving pranks of youthful Krsna still formed the kernel of his discourses, yet a new liberalism and tole¬ rance of religions other than the Radhavallabh sect became a domi¬ nant note. Unity of God and brotherhood of man received due

128

Bliagwan Das Gupta

emphasis. This facilitated a transformation in the character of the Radhavallabh sect under the able guidance of Mihraj, the spiritual successor of Devchand. • • u j After the death of Devchand (5 September, 1655) Mihraj wielded the supreme influence upon his followers. Born on 6 . eptember 1618 Mihraj was a scion of a well known Ksatriya family of Jamnagar. His father Keshav Thakur was a minister of the ruler of Jamnagar and the mother Dhanbai was a pious lady of great repute. Mihraj met Devchand at the impressionable age of twelve with his brother Govardhan. He soon fell under the saintly spell of Dev¬ chand, who too developed a great affection towards his young disciple. Mihraj studied the Vedic texts and the Puranas under the Guidance of Devchand. He grew mature in age and experience and after the death of his father Keshav Thakur, himself became a minister of Jamnagar for some time. He had also married by then. His wife Baiji lovingly called him Praniiath, an address which was later adopted by his followers and Mihraj became popular as Svami Prannath.'^ Mihraj did not remain long in the service of the ruler of Jam¬ nagar. His devotion to Devchand grew in proportion to his maturity. At the behest of his teacher, Mihraj travelled widely in the neigh¬ bouring regions and undertook voyages to the ports of the Persian Gulf and Arabia. He is said to have stayed in Arabia for about four years in order to round up the business of one Khetaji, who was the brother of a disciple of Devchand. Gujarat, Saurashtra, Kutch and Sind were then under the Mughal rule. Prannath’s stint a minister of Jamnagar and his travels to the Persian ports— as

Muscat and Bandar Abbas—and Arabia made him fairly conversant with the Persian and the Arabic, which helped him in the study of the Mohammedan scriptures. Thus he acquired first hand know¬ ledge of Islamic theology and culture. It stood him in good stead in his dealings with the Muslim ulemas and besides widening the horizon of his thought, developed in him a secular outlook.^ After the death of Devchand (5 September, 1655), Prannath took up the mission of his teacher which was that of universal love and peace with all. He added his own bit to it and sought to reconcile the differences of race and religion by stressing the commonhood of God. His missionary zeal prompted him to undertake journeys to distant lands. He not only travelled intensively within Gujarat, but also visited the Portuguese settlement of Diu, Thatta (Sindh), and

Prandmi Sampraddya of Bundelkhand

129

ports of Muscat and Bandar Abbas (Persian Gulf).® These were the times of great stress and strain. Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb had unleashed a war of religious persecution and his short-sighted anti-Hindu policies provoked the widespread popular resistance. The Sikhs in the Punjab, Satnami Jats in the region between Delhi and Agra, Rajputs in Rajputana, the Bundelas in Bundelkhand and the Marathas in the Deccan had risen in arms under the respective leadership of Guru Govind Singh, Gokla Jat, Durgadas Rathore, Chhatrasal and the great Shivaji. Even the saintly souls like Samarth Guru Ramdas, Guru Govind Singh and Swami Prannath could not keep themselves away from the wave that was sweeping over the country and were drawn into the vortex. Before settling down finally at Panna in Bundelkhand, Swami Prannath visited Delhi with a band of his followers in order to seek a meeting with the Emperor Aurangzeb and persuade him to give up his policy of religious persecution. But his efforts to obtain an interview with the Emperor did not materialise. He was even imprisoned by Faulad Khan, the Kotwal of Delhi."^ His followers somehow managed to secure his release. Swami Prannath was now convinced of the futility of his attempt to bring the Emperor to reason. He then proceeded to Udaipur in Rajputana where the Rana asked him to quit his capital. Thereupon moving through Malwa, he entered Bundelkhand in 1683 where he was received with great hospitality and devotion by Chhatrasal of Panna. At that time Chhatrasal was waging a relentless war against the Mughal occupation of his land. Swami Prannath aided and inspired Chhatrasal in his struggle. But this should not be construed as his antagonism to Islam or the Mohammedans in general. He was only against the policy of religious persecution launched by the Mughal imperialists under the bigot Emperor and not against the Islam or its followers as is amply borne out by his secular outlook, discourses and pithy sayings.® Swami Prannath had made a comparative study of the then pre¬ valent popular religions and sects of the country as is only too obvious from the scriptures of the Pranami sect.® He was an erudite scholar and a linguist knowing the Gujarati, Sindi, Hindi, Sanskrit, Persian and Arabic. He had also a fair knowledge of the teachings of Nanak and Kabir. Besides being well versed in the Vedic and Puranic lore, he was not the less conversant with the Qurdn and the

Bhagwan Das Gupta

130

Shariat. His vast learning and erudition made Swami Prannat what he was, a tolerant religious teacher and a social reformer with visions of universal toleration and brotherhood. Pranami sect or sampradaya, as has been noted above was ini i ally an offshoot of the Radhavallabh Sampradaya which under the guidance of its second teacher Swami Prannath acquired the profile of the cults of Nanak and Kabir. It got its appellation Pranami from pranama, a common mode of greeting among its followers. It is also known as the PrannathT and the Nijanand Sampradaya. Swami Prannath, like Nanak and Kabir, was a great protagonist of the basic unity of all religions and decried the intolerance of the Hindus and the Muslims alike. This was the need of the hour. The society was then torn by the differences between the Hindus and the Muslims. Religious and social persecution was the order of the day and its embers were fanned by a non-secular autocratic^ imperialist rule at the top. This caused great concern to Swami Prannath and changed the tenor of his teachings. He deemed Hindu and Muslim communalism to be the bane of Indian society, as it is even now and tried to inculcate a spirit of tolerance and amity between them. This he sought to accomplish by emphasising the unity of God and underlining the inherent similarity of all religions which to him were the paths leading to the same goal. According to him the Vedas and the Quran reveal the existence of the same Lord. Once while clearing the doubts of his favourite disciple Laldas on this point, he remarked: jo kateb so veda batdi / ya mein antar nahin bhai / yek dhani sdhib sab kairi / duji mdni citta jin fairi / hindu turak din dai gdye j tin mil kai dai panth calaye j sehed sahcli ja^tat me hoi / ek arth mil kahat na koi / ab main veda kateb milauh / tinke arth ek tahrauh / meti virodh Jagat jas leuh / ek rdha pargat kar deuh j {Mchraj Charitra, pp. 172-73) (“Whatever is in the Quran, so is taught by the Vedas. There is no difference between the two. One Supreme God is the Lord of all. Do not be confused by believing them to be two (different). Hindus and Turks adhere to two religions and they founded two sects. There is a sort of tug of war in the world. No one em¬ phasises the unity. By a comparative study of the Vedas and the Quran, I would establish their inherent unity. Thus I seek to

Prandmi Sampraddya of Bundelkhand

131

remove antagonism and point out the common path.”) He repeats his above assertions again and again, though a little differently at times, mainly to push the point deep into the con¬ sciousness of his followers. His following verses would suffice by way of examples: jo kitch kahd kateb ne / so hi kehyd ved // dou bade ek sdheb ke / par ladal bind pdye bhed // boll sablJudd pari j ndm jude dhare saban j calan judi kar diya j tdyeh samajli na pari kin // tdt/ieh hui badi iirjhan / so murjhan doe / ndm nisdn jdher karuh / jyoh samjhe sab koe // {Kulzam Khulasa Prakaran, 11-12)

(“What is said in the Qurdn, the same has been asserted in the Vedas. Both (Hindus and Muslims) are the slaves of the same Master. But the differences of language, names and customs have created knotty problems. I will undo them by explaining the name and the attributes (of God) in a way that all may under¬ stand (the Truth.”) And then he concludes; ndm sdroh Judd dhare / lai sabohjudi rasam / sab main urnat aiir duniydh f soi khudd soi brahm /

(Ibid., 12) (“They all gave a different name and adopted varied rituals. All consist of the‘Soul’and the‘Universe’. Khuda and Brahma is the same.”) Prannath’s noble mission is. kardnd sard ek ras, hindit mus dmdn / dhoklid sabkd bhdn ke, sabkd kal wigi jndn // {Kulzam Sanandh Prakaran^ 31)

(“I would unify all the Hindus and Muslims. I understand their deceptions and would impart them Right Knowledge. ) Swami Pramiath, like Kabir and Nanak condemned the religious and social prejudices of the Hindus and Muslims without sparing

Bhogwan Das Gupta 132 the either. About pretentious Muslims he says; kahalahe mahammad ke, cale na mahammad satli / ddr juhddgi din mein, kahe ham stinat jamdt IJ t

k^hidnin Prak

(“They call themselves the followers of Muhammad, but follow Him not. They cause disunity in the Faith and declare that t e majority listens to them. ) Then again, kufra ne kddeh dpno, aiir deklieh sab kufrdn / apnd dhgan na dekhih, kalieh ham musalman // {Kulzam Khidasa Prakaran, 40)

(“They do not get rid of their kufra (infidelity), instead brand all others infidels. They do not look within themselves and yet assert, they are Musalman. ) Swami Prannath condemned in unmistakable terms the bigotry and intolerance of the Muslims towards the Hindus during the reign of Aurangzeb. The following lines amply reveal the plight ot the Hindus under his rule: kareh julam garib par, kohu nd kdhu fariyad / kar sunat gost khilawahih, kaheh hameh hot savdb / O rdjl ek mesh mein, tde mdr chudabe ddb O robe sir pit hoii, e kaheh hameh hot savdb klulnd khildbeh dp mein, dekhldbe masit mehrdb lekar kalmd paddwahih, kaheh hdmeh hot savdb {Kidzam Sanandh Prakaran, 40)

(“They tyrannize over the poor. No one attends to their sup¬ plications. The circumcision is affected and the flesh is fed. They (Hindus) like an attire but forced to give it up. They weep and beat their heads (in anguish). They are made to eat with them (Muslims) and forcibly taken to the mosque and taught the kalmd. This all they (Muslims) deem to be acts of piety. )

Swami Prannath dismisses such flimsy pretexts to perpetrate ex¬ cesses over the Hindus and denouncing the fanatic Muslims, tells them blandly.

Prandmi Sampraddya of Bmdelkhand

133

jo dukh debe kinko, so ndhi musalmdn nabi en musalmdn kd, ndm dharyd meherbdn {Kulzam Sanandh Prakaran, 40)

(“He who persecutes others is not a Mussalman. The Prophet named Mussalman, the one who bestows kindness.”) The high caste Hindus are also not spared for their inhuman treatment of the lower castes. Swami Prannath firmly believed in the social equality of all human beings. To him dress or demeanour with religious and class symbols were meaningless without the purity of heart and thought. He poses a question to the Hindus: cahdal herdeh nirmal, sang kJiele bbagvdn / dekhdbe nahin kdinih ko, gop rdklie ndm // vipra bJiesh baker drsti, khat karam pale ved / sydm khin supne nahin, jane nahin brahm bhed / udar kudum karne, uttamai dekhdben ahg vydkaran bdd vivdd ke, arth kareh kai rang ab kaho kdke chue, ahg Idge chot j adham tarn vipra ahge, cahdal ahg udyot j I {Kulzam Sanandh Prakaran, 16)

(“There is a Chandal (the untouchable) with a pure heart devot¬ ed to God who does not display his devotion, but keeps it a secret. And there is a brahmin dressed as such, but with an eye on the worldly things, who cites the Vedas to suit his evil designs. He does not ever dream of Syama (Krsna) and knows nothing of Brahma Bhed (knowledge of the Brahma). Further, he exhibits outward cleanliness in order to earn the livelihood for his family and gives varied interpretations of grammatical controversies to support his selfish ends. Now, bespeak: By touching who one becomes unclean, by touching the most wicked brahmin or the Chandal with an enlightened soul?”) Such examples of Prannath’s unequivocal condemnation of the intolerance of the high caste Hindus are scattered alt over the chapters of the Kulzam (the scripture of Pranami sect, also known as the Tar Tamya Sagar) and the Vitaks composed by his disciples. To sum up, Swami Prannath was equally critical of the intole¬ rance, prejudices and superstitions of the both Hindus and Muslims. He always tried to impress upon both of them the golden rule of

Bhagwan Das Gupta

134

(universal toleration), enunciated by Akbar about a century earlier and followed the trial blazed forth by his illustrious

Sulah-Kiil

predecessors in this regard, Nanak and Kabir. Prannath asserted repeatedly, jat ek khusam ki, aur ria koi jat / ek khusam ek duniya, aur ud gai duji vdt jj {Kulzam Sanandh Prakaran, 40)

(“There is no other caste or tribe except that of thd Lord. There is only a Lord and His universe, others pale into insignificance. ) Swami Prannath w'as the man of the masses. His mission was to propagate and popularise the tenets of his faith among the people of different regions. Therefore he adopted the regional languages. This accounts for the multi-language verses of the Kulzam which are variedly composed in the Gujarati, Sindhi and Hindi with a fair sprinkling of the Persian and the Punjabi. However it must be said to the credit of Swami Prannath that even in those distant times, he had the prophetic vision of Hindi being the language of the vast masses of India with all the attributes of the national language. He stressed this point in the following manner: boli judi saban ki, dur sabkd judd calan / sab urfhe ncim jude dhar, par mere to kahena saban // bind hisdbeh boliydh, mileh sakal jahdn j sabko sugam jdnke, kahuhgi liindustdn // badi bhdsd ehi bhali, so sab men jdher / karke pdk saban ko, ahtar mdhhi bdher // {Kulzam Sanandh Prakaran, 40)

(“All have different languages and customs. They all are engaged in controversies by different names. But I have to address them all. There are languages in whole of the world, without number. But since the language of Hindustan (Hindi) is the most easy, I will speak in it. This is really the most major language known to all and I have to purify them all, inside and out.”) Swami Prannath thus sought to prepare the way for the emotional national integration of the country by striking at the roots of Hindu-Muslim communalism, social inequalities and the contro¬ versies of race, religion and language. His suggestions and solutions

Prandmi Sampradaya of Bundelkhand

135

still hold good and may well help in resolving the differences which plague the Indian nation. Swami Prannath died on Friday, the 29 June 1694 at Panna (Madhya Pradesh) where his last remains lay enshrined in a beauti¬ ful temple which also houses the valuable manuscripts of the Pranami Sampradaya. The Kulzam, crown and the flute of Krsna receive regular offerings and the followers of Ihe Pranami sect from Gujarat, Sind, north India and Nepal flock to Panna on the eve of Sarad Purnima (autumn full moon after the pujd) to participate in the week long festival. References

‘Radhavallabh Sect was an offshoot of the Vaisnavism. Its followers worship¬ ped the child Kfsna of Braj and Sri Bhdgavata Purdna was their scripture. The deeds of Bala Krsna, his loving pranks, rasa bids and the spiritual love with Radha and the Braj maidens formed the main theme of their recitations and discourses. Krsna was taken to be the beloved {priyatama) and the followers were deemed to be the sakhis or his maiden playmates who were as devoted and faithful to him as a wife to her husband. The philosophic idea being that Krsna was the Greater Soul (paraindtmd) from whom the lesser souls have emanated, and it should be the ultimate goal of the latter which are immersed in the mdyd (illusion) to seek union with their Creator and thus attain moksa (salvation). This could be accomplished through the guidance of a teacher and by the study of scriptures, their recitations, religious discourses and a keen desire akin to obsession to come to face with face the Greater Soul. "Mchraj Charitra (MC), pp. 4, 8, 15; Britain Muktdmli (BM), pp. 4, 5, 35-75, 79-81, 108. "MC, p. 21; 5M, pp. 116, 126. 'MC, pp. 24, 32; BM, pp. 112, 138, 127, 147, 150. "Lai Das

pp. 109-15, 165-73, 189-211.

’’Ibid. , , ,, Tbid , pp. 310-16, 320-65, 390-433. Faulad Khan or Sidi Paulad was the Kotwal of Delhi, Maasir-i-Alamgiri, Eng. trans., l.N. Sarkar, pp. Ill'll'‘Lai Das Bitak, pp. 570-82, 610, Life and Times of Maharaja Chhatrasal Biindela, pp. 96-98. "The Pranami scriptures mainly include the Kulzam, Lai Das Bitak, Britain Muktavali, and Mehraj Charitra. The Kulzam is the collection of Swami Prann§th’s teachings and discourses in verse. Its chapters are variedly written in Gujarati, Sindi and Hindi. Lai Das Bitak was written by Lai Das the most favourite disciple of Prannath, while Britain Muktavali was composed by Brijbhushan, a disciple of Chhatrasal Bundela of Panna. The author of Mehraj C/icji-uru was Hansraj, a Bakhshi of Hirdeshah who succeeded to the thione of Panna after the death of his father Chhatrasal. All of these scriptures have now been published by the Prannath Mission, New Delhi.

Influence of Islam and Sufism on Prannath’s Religious Movement HAFIZ MD. TAHIR ATI

Sufism has influenced most of the religious movements of India from the thirteenth century onwards. Indian people being mostly religious-minded and inclined towards mysticism, warmly welcomed the mystical teachings of Muslim Sufis. On the othei hand, egalitarian and humanistic attitude of the Sufis attracted the masses who were groaning under the pressure of casteism and untouchability in their own society. The door of Sufi khanqahs were open to all and sundry without any distinction of caste and creed. As a result, popularity of Sufism grew in leaps and bounds and played a vital role in changing the Indian society and culture. From the thirteenth century” remarks Prof. Gibb “Sufism increasingly attracted the creative social and intellectual energies within the community, to become the bearer or instrument of a social and cultural revolution.”! Monotheism and devotional adoration, although not altogether unknown to the religious leaders of India, got much impetus by similar Sufi doctrines. Most of the founders of religious sects made the best use of their knowledge of Sufism and used the Sufi terminologies to preach their views; thus Sufism helped in stimulating the Indian religious movements. Influence of Sufism is quite evident in the teachings of Kabir, Dadu, Guru Nanak and others. Although there is no evidence that Caitanya had studied Islam yet it has been admitted that he had contacts with Muslims,^ there¬ by it may be assumed, although not with all certainty, that he might have imbibed some of the Islamic and Sufi doctrines parti¬ cularly pertaining to devotion and love of God. But as far as Kabir is concerned there is no such uncertainty. He was brought up in a Muslim family and was acquainted with Islamic and Sufi teachings due to family tradition as well as his personal contacts with con¬ temporary shaikhs and pirs. It is said that he was a disciple of

Influence of Islam and Sufism on Prdnnath's Religious Movement 137

Shaikh Taqi^ who belonged to Suharwardiya order."* The author of the book Kabir is not ready to accept him as a disciple of Shaikh Taqi yet he writes: As the Sufi preachings had already spread all over Northern India in Kabir’s time, and as Sufi mysticism had impregnated the religious sensibility of the elite as well as the whole composite culture of the time, Kabir’s own religious ideals and representa¬ tions could not but be somewhat influenced by Sufi thought and imagery, as is suggested by many of his sayings.^ Guru Nanak was also acquainted with Islamic teachings and Sufi doctrines. A.A. Rizvi thinks that as he belonged to a literate family, neatly placed in the service of the Afghan governors of the Punjab, he must have listened to verses of Rumi, Sa’di, Flafiz and Jami in his own environment and the thought of the great mystic poets would hqve aroused his interest in divine love, grace and mercy.® Guru Nanak had travelled extensively and visited many important holy places. Moreover he had met and conversed with many Sufis of his time particularly Shaikh Sharaf of Panipat and Shaikh Ibrahim, the spiritual successor of Baba Farid al-Din Ganji-Shakar. Therefore his teachings are very close to the mystical doctrines preached by Muslim Sufis. Dr. Tara Chand writes: “How deep Guru Nanak’s debt is to Islam, it is hardly necessary to state, for it is so evident in his words and thoughts. Manifestly he was steeped in Sufi lore and the fact of the matter is, that it is much harder to find how much exactly he drew from the Hindu Scriptures.’ Four hymns and 130 slokas^ of Shaikh Farid have been included in the Adi Grantli compiled by Guru Arjun in ad 1604. There is a dispute concerning the authorship of these slokas. Khaliq Ahmad Nizami is of the opinion that Shaikh Ibrahim is probably the real author.® However, this is beyond dispute that these flokas are the compositions of a Sufi and reflect the impact of Sufism on Sikh religion. Similarly Dadu Panthi sect is also influenced by Sufism. Dadu Dayal, a disciple of KamaF® had frequent contact with the Sufis. His knowledge of Islam and Sufism is evident from his verses which he composed in Hindi, Gujarati, Marwari and Persian. According to Aziz Ahmad he “was especially impressed by the Suharwardiya

Hafiz Md. Tahir Alt

138

emphasis on the light of God (mr) which appears again and again as a theme of devotional ecstasy in his poetry. Many scholars have stressed the Islamic and Sufi influence on different religious movements of India but that on Prannath s preachings has not yet been fully assessed. In this paper an attempt has been made to show the influence of Islam and Sufism on Prannath’s religious teachings. Prannath (1618-94), whose original name is Mihir Raj or Mihraj Thakur, belonged to Gujarat. He was born at Jamnagar m a Ksatriya family. His father was the prime minister of Jamnagar. Prannath became the disciple of Sri Devchand and later on, by the permission of his guru, he went to Arabia where he stayed for five years On coming back he served two rajas successfully as their prime minister. The Raja of Jamnagar, due to some misunder¬ standing, put him into prison where he started to compose verses which contained his religious views. He started his religious move¬ ment from Surat and travelled far and wide of the country to make it a success. His verses in Gujarati, Sindhi and Khadi Boli have been collected in the book Qulzam Swamp} - It is a collection of seventeen treatises containing 1875 quatrains (chaupdis). His nom-de-plum, in most of the verses, is Mahamat or Mahamati. Islamic and Sufi terminologies have been extensively used by Mahamati Prannath, and particularly in the treatises Khulasa, Khilwat, Marrar Sagar, Chhota Qayamat Nama and Bada Qayamat Hama esoteric and mystical connotations of Islamic and Sufi doctrines have been explained. His followers are called Pranami . They are also called “Dhanis” or “Prannathis”.^^ Mahamati Prannath has opposed caste distinction and tried ta abolish idol-worship. Pie is a monotheist and firmly believes in one God who is the Lord of the universe. He also believes that Muhammad is the true Prophet and none excelles him in greatness. dpne drstise sal kaheh, khudd. ek mahammat barhak / aur nd koyi age piche bind mahammad buzrak // {“Quranic verses and Hadith all declare that God is one and

Muhammad is true: And neither before nor after, anyone is greater than Muham¬ mad.”)'^

Influence of Islam and Sufism on Prdmath's Religious Movement 139

He describes three phases of Prophet Muhammad (1) bashari (human), (2) malaki (angelic) and (3) haqqi (divine).Bimla Mehta writes that Muhammad is the command of God and that power of Light {niir which comes in the world time and again to guide the human being and to convey the message of God.^® But in many of the quatrains we find that Prannath has clearly described Muham¬ mad as the last Prophet and the recipient of the last Divine scrip¬ ture. Even then if Bimla Mehta’s explanation be the correct inter¬ pretation of Pranna til’s view of Muhammad then it means that he speaks of the reality of Muhammad {hakiqat-e-muhammadi) which according to the Sufis is the first epiphany of God, and is known as Wahdat. According to the Sufis divine essence is unknowable. The essence manifests itself in different forms. These manifestations are known as descents (tanazzuldt). There are six descents {tanazzuldt-e-sitta) namely ahadiyat which is the manifestation of the Absolute One in the state of Unity. The second is wahdat where the essence becomes conscious of itself and knows all its potential attributes and determinations in a general way. This is also called reality of Muhammad by which all things emanate, and here miracles are bestowed upon the prophets and saints. This saying attributed to Prophet Muhammad (awwalumd khalaqa al-allahu nari wa kullu-alkhaldiqui min nuri wa and min nur-al-allah) refers to it. Here it is necessary to note that the personality of Muhammad is different from the reality of Muhammad. Probably Mahamati Prannath refers to it. The third is wahidiat where God becomes conscious of His attributes and determinate forms in detail. One must keep in mind that this becoming is not an event in the life of the essence for the essence does not suffer any change. These three are known as Divine ranks {maratibi ilahi), and the remaining three (i) *'Alam-i-Arwah (World of spirits), (ii) Alam-iMithal (World of similitude) and (m) “Alami-i-Ajsam (Woild of body) are known as worldly ranks {maratibi kuni). Some of the Sufis call the first three as (/') Lahut, {ii) Jabarut, and MalakuU'^ while others are of the opinion that all the three Divine ranks are Lahut and the worldly ranks are Jabarut, Malakut and Nasut respectively.^® Mahamati Prannath

has

used

purely

Sufi terms

‘Lahut ,

“Jabarut”, “Malakut” and “Nasut” at many places and has ex¬ plained them in his own way.^®

Hafiz Md. Tahir Ali

140

Unity of religions is the central idea of his preaching. According to him the teachings of Katab, i.e. Quran, Bible, Torah and Psalmare the same as those of Vedas. He preaches that all the religions, in spite of external differences, lead to the same goal. The external differences are only due to the difference of language, society, region and clime. Every prophet had to convey the Divine message in the language of his country and particularly in accordance with the social condition and the level of understanding of his people. Disputes among the followers of different religions are only due to the ignorance of the real import of holy Scriptures. See the follow¬ ing quatrains: dohe kahen vajud ek hai, arbah sabon mein ek / ved kateb ek batdvahon, par pavai ne koi vivek jj

(“Both (Hindus and Muslims) accept that the existence is same, and there is one soul in everybody; Vedas and Kateb teach the same thing but nobody understands the real meaning.”)^® yo kuch kahayd kateb ne, so'hi kahayd red / red ek saheb ke, par ladas bind pdye vivek //

(“Whatever has been said in Vedas the same are in Kateb: All are the slaves of one Lord, but quarrel without knowing the secret.”)’^^ boli sabon jiidi pari, ndm judi dhare savan / calan Judd kar liyd, tdyen samajh na pari kin //

(“People have different languages, and call God with different names; Their ways (of adoration) are also different, so they don’t under¬ stand (the reality).’’)“2 sabjdte ndm Jude dhare, aur sab kd sambad ek j sab ko bandagi vdhJ ki, piche Jade bin pdye vivek 11

(“Different people call him with different names, but Husband (Lord) of all is the same; All adore only Him but quarrel without knowing the truth. The Quran explicitly mentions the nanres of three Divine Scrip¬ tures {Bible of Jesus Christ), {Torah of Moses) and {Psalm of David),

Influence of Islam and Sufism on Prdnnath's Religious Movement 141 but not that of Vedas, although Quran demands that a Muslim, must believe in all the Divine Scriptures revealed to different prophets. Therefore a Muslim can neither accept nor reject the Vedas categorically as Divine Scripture. However, it is an article of faith for a Muslim to believe that all the Divine Scriptures convey the same message, and likewise, all the religions preached by differ¬ ent prophets lead to the same goal. Shah Wall Allah of Delhi writes: “All the religions despite different forms and shapes, agree upon the basic articles of faith and the fundamental of virtue. For example, every religion that has come down from God, prescribes purity, prayer, alms giving and pilgrimage. It is, however, a differ¬ ent matter, if the methods of the observations of these duties be dissimilar. To seek nearness to God, through prayers and worship, is the teaching of every religion. The remembrance of God in the morning and in the evening for which the word “Dhikr” has come, reading of the Divine scriptures and reckoning it as a means of goodly reward, are enshrined in every religion. Similarly in all the Shariats, marriage is made lawful and adultry is forbidden. It is the teaching of all the prophets that whatever government be in exist¬ ence, it should follow the path of justice and equity, and safeguard the interest of the weak and give a proper punishment to the criminal and the wrong-doer. These are the fundamental principles of religion common among all the systems of faith. Sufis believe that with whatever name you call God, He will, respond it, Sanai says: bandm auki auw nami naddrad, bahar ndmi ki khawani sarbardrad. (“In the name of one who has no name. With whatever name you call Him, He uplifts His head.”) Dara Shikoh begins the introduction of Mejnld’Ul Bahrain with the following couplet: kiifr waislam dar rahash puydm, wahdahu Id sharika lahu goydn. (“Islam and Infidelity (Hinduism) both are galloping on the way towards God; Both exclaim: He is one and none shares His Sovereignty.”)’^

Hafiz Md. Tahir Ali

142

Regarding the dispute concerning God the Holy Quran says: wamina al-ndsi man yu jadiluua fial-allahi bifiairi ‘almin-wa Id hudd wa la kitabin munir

(“Among mankinds is he who disputeth concerning Allah without knowledge or guidance or a Scripture giving light. ) These Islamic and Sufi concepts of the Unity and Sovereignty of God Unity of revelation and variety of Divine scriptures have permeated to a great extent into the teachings of Prapnath as we have observed in the aforesaid quatrains. Similarly Mahamati Prannath’s attempts to

^ ^ explain Quranic

verses mystically is the impact of similar Sufi endeavour. Sufis have written many commentaries upon Quran from mystical point of view stressing on the esoteric meaning. They say that Quranic verses have more than one meaning. Mawlana Ashraf All Thanwai quotes a Hadith: inna lilqurdni zdhirdn wa batind (“Indeed for the Quran there are external and internal (mean¬

ings.”)^’ Ibn ‘Arabi quotes the saying of Hadrat Ibn’ ‘Abbas who says : If I comment upon the verse: Allahu alladi khalaqa sab‘a samdwat wa min al-ard mithlahunna yatanafzalu al-amra bainahunna

(“You will stone me”, and in another saying, “you will call me infidel.”)'’® Mawlana Jalal al-Din Rumi says: Know that the words of the Quran have an exterior (sense) and under the exterior (sense) an interior (sense) exceedingly over¬ powering; And beneath the inward (sense), is a third interior (sense) where¬ in all intellect become lost. The fourth interior (sense) of the Quran, none hath perceived at all, except God the peerless and incomparable.

Influence of Islam and Sufism on Frannalh's Religious Movement 143

In the Quran do not thou, O son, regard (only) the exterior, the Devil regards Adam as naught but clay. The exterior of the Quran is like a man’s person, for his features are visible, whereas his spirit is hidden. Prannath also has emphasised again and again that one should not take only the external meaning of the Quran. He, like the Sufis, has given esoteric interpretation of many Quranic words such as Lailat al-Qadr, al-Fair, Qayamat etc. Quranic description of Lailat al-Qadr is thus:

Lo I We revealed it on the Night of Power. Ah, what will convey unto thee what the Night of Power is. The Night of Power is better than a thousand months. The .Angels and the Spirits descend therein, by the permission of their Lord, with all decrees. (The night is) Peace until the rising of the dawn.^o Sufis use the word Lailat al-Qadr in mystical sense. According to them it is a time when a salik (traveller of mystical path) reaches a stage, known as ""Ain al-Jania; where he is endowed with a parti¬ cular manifestation by which he becomes aware of his place and his relation as well as nearness with God.^i Prannath interprets it, in his own \\ ay, as a night of manifestation of Divine play,^^ and as the night preceding to the dawn of Qayamat (day of religious awakening, according to Prannath). Quran has repeated the wovd Lailat al-Qadr tlwice in the aforesaid Surah. This repetition has special significance for Mahamati Pran¬ nath.According to him Lailat al-Qadr was completed in three partsj first at the time of Prophet Hud, second at the time of Prophet Null, and third at the time of awakening (his own time). The first has also been related with the Childhood of Lord Krsna, and the second with his Rasa Lila (amorous sport).^ Similarly he symbolises carnal self {nafsi ammarah) with Dajjal. Sufis always try to subdue and overpower the carnal self because it is a great obstacle in the path of God. It is the source of all evils and takes a man away from God by forcing him to indulge in pro¬ hibited pleasures. Prannath warns that Dajjal is very powerful and he overpowers every one. None can see him but he is present in every body and deceives in such a way that one cannot diffeientiate

Hafiz Md. Tahir Ali

144

between right and wrong. People are waiting for his appearance in the world but they are not seeing in their own self. Dajjal first trapped the learned persons and then none could escape.^^ There is nothing about Dajjal in the Holy Quran but we find his description in Kitab al-Fitan of Sahih Bukhari and Sahih Muslim. It is said that Dajjal will appear at the time when the day of judge¬ ment will be very near. He will let the tyranny and evils prevail all over the world, then, at last, will perish at the hand of Christ or Imam Mehdi and the whole world will surrender to Islam. Some marks of DajjaF^ are also found in Hadith. Prannath claims to be Imam Mehdi or the last Imam.^^ He has described the mystical connotations of the marks of Dajjal narrated in Hadith. Sufis have described four stages on the way to God; (1) Shariat, (2) Tariqat, (3) Haqiqat and (4) Marifat. Shariat is the religious law; Tariqat is spiritual path; Haqiqat is the stage of reality, and Marifat is the gnosis of God. Among these four. Shariat is the prerequisite for spiritual progress. None can enter into the domain of Tariqat without being perfect in the observance of Shariat. In observance of Shariat mere formalities are of no value in Sufism. A faqih (jurist) may be satisfied if rituals and prayers are per¬ formed, but a Sufi shall give no importance to mere performance of rituals until and unless they are adorned with sincerity, piety, devotion and love to God. Shaikh Abu Sa id Kherraz says. Reality of religion is the purity of heart from all the things and heart’s comfort with God.^® whose prayers are mere pretensions, is not a true Muslim. Prannath also speaks the same: jo andar jhuti badahgi, dekhlave bahar / tinko muslim jin kaho, vaha savdbi dam jdher 11

(“Whoever is not sincere in servitude and pretends to be so; Who calls him a Muslim, he is in illusion.”)^^ dilpdk jolon hoye nahih, kahd vajud upar se dhoye j dhoye vajiidd pdk dil, kabhuh huyd no koye //

(“If heart is not pure, it is useless to wash the body; By washing the body none gets purification of heart. However, for getting perfection, sincerity is the must. After becoming perfect in Shariat a Salik traverses the stages of Tariqat,.

Influence oj Islam and Suflsm on Prdnndtii's Religious Movement 145

and by renouncing the world self {nafs) and lust, he enters realizes the truth that God is tent except God. He beholds Prannath describes it thus:

and transgressing the limit of lower into the realm of Haqiqat"'^ where he the only Reality and nothing is exis¬ God everywhere and in everything.

khdna pind daheddr, rojd, nimdj ditdr / ek dosto June hak ki, duno sab murddr //

(“(His) eating, drinking, fasting and prayer all are vision of God: He has the friendship with God alone, and all others are dead for him.”)^^ At the stage of Marifat, which is the summum bonwn, the secret of Divine Existence and Attributes are manifested. This stage is only for the chosen ones. Prannath has described the stages of Shariat, Tariqat, Haqiqat and Marifat in many of his quatrains. In Marfat Sagdr he explains them like the Sufis. sariat, tarlkat hakikat event marifat / in chdron ki bine isldm judi judi kahe jugat //

(“Shariat, Tariqat, Haqiqat and Marifat; Islam is the foundation of these four which are known as diffe¬ rent planes. He further says: sari bine isldm ki pdk kere vejud / tarikat polionce maikut Ion jdge hoye jhakd maksud // bine isldm hakikat so khole bdtun saha najar / polwuce \afd nur makdm khds giro flrasto fajar // islam bine hak marfat pohohcdve tajalla nur // e makdn jCisik sahoh ka, giro sdmal khds hajur 11

(“Shariat is the foundation of Islam which purifies the body; And Tariqat takes a Salik to the stage of Malakut where no existence is needed. Haqiqat, the foundation of Islam, unveils the secret of soul; And takes (the Salik) to the abode of Light amidst the group of conscious angels.

Hafiz Md. Tahir Ali

146 Marifat, the

foundation of

Islam, takes (the Salik) to the

manifestation of Divine Light; This is the abode of loving soul where the groups of chosen of the chosens remain in Divine presence. Mahamati Prannath has also mentioned the stations of Tariqat (miiqdmdti siiluk) such as gratitude, poverty, patience etc. and counted them as the means for Divine Love. He says: niahdniat kahe iman isak ki sukar garibi major / in bidh ruhen dosti dhani ki, pyar kar sake tyokar //

“Mahamat says that the faith of love is gratitude, poverty and patience; These are the ways through which the souls enjoy the company of the Lord, so love God as such if you can.”)^^ He has also given much stress on Divine Love which occupies an central place in Sufism, and the Sufi literature, particularly poetry, is replete with this theme. Moreover, the Sufis warn that ego or “F’ness is a veil between the lover and the beloved. Union with God is impossible until and unless one annihilates his ego and gets rid of “L’ness. Prannath also says the same thing. e main main payon e maran nahin diir kahaval hai rnurda / Jade nuru Jamal ke, ehi hai parda //

“Why does this “I” not die, though it is called dead; this is veil which hides the Divine beauty.”)^® Thus we find that Prannath has made the best use of his acquain¬ tance with Islam and Sufism to preach his religious views. His quatrains bear ample evidence of his being well versed in Islamic and Sufi learnings; and his knowledge of Islam and Sufism seems to be deeper than the founders of other religious sects. He had used innumerable Sufi terminologies, and it is not possible to discuss all of them in this paper. However the foregoing passages are enough to give an idea about the extent of Islamic and Sufi influ¬ ence on his religious movement. The fact of the matter is that Prannath’s religious teaching is so much influenced by Islamic teachings and Sufi doctrines that it can never be understood or appreciated without a good knowledge of Islam and Sufism.

Influence of Islam and Suflsm on Prdnndth's Religious Movement 147 References ‘Gibb, “An Interpretation of Islamic History”,/owrWo/lForW History vol , no. 1, quoted by K.A. Nizami in Some Aspects of Religion and Politics in India during Thirteenth Century, p. 260. ^A.K. Majumdar, Chaitanya-His Life and Doctrines, p. x. ^Ghulam Sarwar, Khazinat al-Asfiya, vol. I, p. 446. ^Yusuf Husain, Glimpses of Medieval Indian Culture, p. 19. Ch. Vaudeville, Kabir, p. 94. “S. A A. Rizvi, “Indian Sufism and Guru Nanak” in Perspectives on Guru Hanak ed. Harbans Singh, pp. 200-1. ^Tara Chand, Influence of Islam on Indian Culture, p. 176. ^Surinder Singh Kohli, A Critical Study of Adi Granth, p. 2. Khaliq Ahmad Nizami, r/ie Li/e W Times of Shaik Farid-fd Din Ganj-iShakar, p. 122. ^"Tara Chand, op. cit., p. 185. ^^Aziz Ahmad, Studies in Islamic Culture in the Indian Environment, p. 148. Sri Qulzarn Swamp. '^H.H. Wilson, Religious Sects of the Hindus, p. 196. ^’'Marfat Sagar, 3;88: see 3:79 and 81 also. ^^Singar, 26:1, ^®Bimla Mehta, Bani Mukta, p. 21. ‘‘Md. A‘la bin’Ali, Kashshaf Istilahat al-Funun, vol. I, p. 200-1. ‘“Shah Abd al-Samad, Istilahat al-Sufiya, 1929, p. 134. ‘“See Marfat Sagar, 3:55-56 and 1:11. ^^Khiilasa, 12:41 "‘Ibid., 12:42. "■‘Ibid., 12:43. ""Ibid., 2:22. "‘Prof. G.N. Jalbani, Teachings of Shah IValiullah of Delhi, p. 100, quoted by Mawlana Said Ahmad Akbarabadi in his article, “Islam and other Religions” in Islam, pp. 106-7. Bikramajit }Ta.%xdit, Dara Shikuh—Life and Times p 219 *"Qurdn, 22:8. ^'Ashraf Ali Thanwi, ‘Al-Tasharruf bi-Ma’ rifat-i.Ahadith al-Tasassuf, p. 43. Ibn Arabi, Fiitiihat al-Makkiya, vol. I, p. 3 .. "“R.A. Nicholson, r/ie Mar/iwaH'/o/ Jalaluddin Rumi. IV.4 quoted by A A. Rizvi, op. cit. Quran, 97:1-5. "'^Kashshaf Istilahat al-Funus, op. cit., vol. II, p. 1304; Istilahat-i-Sufiva op-cit., p. 125. • ’ Marfat Sagar, 1:37-50. ’"Ibid.. 1:51. ^'Qtdzum Swamp, Shabd Kosh, p, 70. "‘See Bani Mukta, op. cit., p. 16. ’'■'Dajjal Ka Nisan, Marfat Sagar, p. 1502. Marfat Sagar, 11:12.

Hafiz Md. Tahir Alt

148

"®Khwaja Farid al-Din Attar, Tadhkirat al-AwIiya Matba Mujtabai, 1317 A.H., p.

259.

^^Sanand, 21:35.

“Ibid., 21:40. *^Kasbshaf, op. cit., vol. 1, pp. 333-34, ‘^^Sanand, 22:43. ^^Marfat Sagar, 4:23, “Ibid., 4:28-30. ^^Kirtan 102:12. “Ibid.,2;28,

14 The Life and Mission of Karaikkal Ammaiyar N. JAGADEESAN

The dictum that hails Siva as the sovereign of the southern country is indicative of the antiquity of Saivism in the Tamil land. Bhakti is one of the main ideas of Saivism. Caitanya (fifteenth centui-y ad) “is generally, but erroneously, regarded as the great introducer into South India of this idea of bhakti.'”^ That is because the bhakti of the Vaisnava Alvars and the Saiva Nayanmars was several centuries prior to him. Even though the Padma Parana^ and the Sri Bhagavata^ state that bhakti originated in the Dravida country, the emergence of a clearly delineated personal God can be detected only in the Gita. But, it is not definitely known when and how that bhakti percolated to the South. “We have lost the historical link between the early bhakti movement of the North and the movement in the South.”^ Yet it is just possible that it was an independent development, though not perhaps absolutely so. The loving piety that characterises bhakti popularised Saivism. “The theory of devotion made inroads upon the inexorability of fate, and men in distress turned to God as a sure shield against misfortune.”^ Just like the temple worship, pilgrimage and devotional hymns, the hagiological accounts too flanked bhakti to promote the cause of Saivism. Unable to bear agony, some may turn pessimistic and wonder whether life is worth living. It is at such a juncture that the biographies of saints, contained in the religious texts, offer solace and provide inspiration and strength. The saints of Saivism were active participants in God’s grace and “shared their necta¬ rine experiences with the masses.”® In his Tiruttondattogai, a breviary of Saiva dovotees, Sundaramurthi, the last of the Tevdrdmtrio, pays homage to the sixty-three Nayanmars. Karaikkal Ammaiyar is one of the three women who find mention in it, the other two being Mahgaiyarkkarafiyar (wife of the Pandya king, Ninrasir Nedumaran) and Isainaniyar (mother of Sundaramurthi). It is a common knowledge that the Hindu women saints were invariably the followers of the bhakti cult. Karaikkal Ammaiyar is

150

N. Jagadeesan

renowned for Siva-bhakti. She is an excellent exponent of ‘the fervent, self-negating love and worship of Siva.’ Sekkijar has versified her life and fortunes in his Peria Purdnamd Notwithstand¬ ing a supernatural overtone, characteristic of the typical Indian way of describing the saints, it reveals the integrity of her devotion to the supreme being and the quest for higher spiritual attainment. Punidavati was the only daughter of Danadattan, a leading and wealthy Vaisya in Karaikkal,^ a coastal town in the Cola country. From the very tender days of her childhood, her devotion to Siva was unlimited. She deligtited in extolling His praises even while at play. She was accustomed to pay obeisance to the Sivanadiyars on sight. As days passed, she grew up as a charming damsel. There¬ upon, Danadattan began to think about her marriage for settling her in life. At that time, Nidipati, a notable Vaisya in Nagaippatiinam,^ was in search of a suitable bride for his son, Paramadattan. Nidipati’s men contacted Danadattan in this regard. And Dana¬ dattan consented to give his daughter in marriage to Paramadattan. Eventually the marriage between Paramadattan and Punidavati was solemnized on an auspicious day at Karaikkal. As Punidavati was his darling daughter, Danadattan was unwilling to part with her. He quartered both Punidavati and Paramadattan in a beautifully built mansion, not far from his own, in Karaikkal. Moreover,‘he provided them with abundant means to lead a happy life. With the acquisi¬ tion of a bounteous affluence and a heightened status, Parama¬ dattan shot up as a businessman in Karaikkal. Punidavati’s Sivabhakti was unceasingly ever on the increase notwithstanding her excellence in domesticity. Whenever the Sivanadiyars visited, she fed them sumptuously and gifted them gold, rich gems and good clothings generously. One morning, Paramadattan was away from home. Some persons met him and gave him two mangoes. He met their needs and sent the mangoes home. Punidavati received the fruits and kept them inside. Then, an old and famished Sivanadiyar entered the house. She welcomed him whole-heartedly. As he came in, she gave him water to clean his feet. Next, she laid the plate and called him for dinner although it was not yet time for lunch. She had cooked only rice by then. Neither curry, nor any other side-dish was ready. Nevertheless, her conviction that no fortune was worthier than officiating as a host for an exceptional guest like the starving Sivanadiyar impelled her to decide upon appeasing his appetite at

The Life and Adission of Karaikkal Amniaiydr

151

once. So, she served the cooked rice first. Then, she swiftly brought one of the two mangoes sent by her husband and placed it on the plate as an additional dish. The simple dinner ended his hunger. Immensely pleased with her kind hospitality, he blessed her and went away. After the Sivanadiyar had gone, Punidavati completed the rest of the cooking. Around noon, Paramadattan returned home. He took a nice bath and then arrived for dinner. Punidavati served him dinner in order and then put the remaining mango on the plate. Finding its good taste, he asked for the other one too. Disinclined to deny him what he desired and urged by implicit obedience, Punidavati moved inside as if she would fetch it. Alas! What could she do in such a predicament? Stricken with grief, she stood there forgetting about herself completely and meditating intensely upon the holy feet of Siva and praying for his succour. Instantly she got a mango due to His grace. She rushed to Paramadattan and gave that to him gladly. The divine mango tasted more delicious than nectar. So, Paramadattan seriously doubted if it was the same sent by him. Declaring that such a mango could never by obtained in all the three worlds, he enquired wherefrom did she get it. The thought that Siva’s grace and grant were beyond expression silenced her. But, her fidelity pointed out the impropriety in not answering her husband. Anyway, it was her moral obligation to expose all that had happened. So, she recounted everything. After hearing the full account, the unconvinced Paramadattan told her to obtain another similar mango as a proof of Siva’s grace. Punidavati went inside again. She had no other go but to pray once more. She prayed by saying that if Siva did not grant her one more mango, her words that she got the previous one by His grace would be falsified. At once, there was a new mango, which she offered her husband. With great wonder he took it from her. But, it disappear¬ ed suddenly. Shocked by this, he was perplexed and frightened. Fancying that Punidavati was a venerable deity, he began to shun her. To leave her permanently was his ulterior motive. Stating that he intended to go on a lucrative overseas trade, he started neces¬ sary preparations. Ships were built and fully equipped with mer¬ chandise. On a good day, he commenced his commercial voyage.. After earning a huge wealth in the course of his foreign trade, Paramadattan set sail again and landed in a city in the Pandya country. He arranged for multiplying his wealth, wedded a Vaisya

152

N. Jagadeesan

lady of that place and settled there itself happily. He had a daughter by his second wife. He named the child Punidavati after his first wife, whom he still remembered and revered as a divinity. In Karaikkal, Punidavati was managing her home singly and awaiting her husband’s return. The news about the prosperous life of Paramadattan in a city in the Pandya country reached Karaikkal. Punidavati’s relatives ascertained its veracity and felt greatly concerned. They resolved to conduct her to Paramadattan. So, they proceeded to the Pandya country and Punidavati accompanied them in a curtained and gem-set palanquin. Within a few days, they were in the vicinity of their destination and immediately conveyed the news of their arrival to Paramadattan. Paramadattan, followed by his second wife and his young daughter, hastened to meet them. On seeing Punidavati, he fell at her feet along with his two dependents and said that he owed his life to her grace and that his child was given only her name. His action aroused fear in the timid Punidavati, who moved closer to her relatives. Flushed with shame, they asked him to explain his conduct of making obeisance to his wife. He replied that Punidavati was not a human mortal but a goddess and that he left her and named his daughter after her only on that account. Further, he wanted them also to worship her feet. Paramadattan’s idea thus becoming clear. Punidavati was resolute in shedding her beauty-clad mass of flesh so long sustained by her only for his sake. With her thoughts firmly fixed on the holy feet of Siva, she prayed for the conferment of the “Pey Uru” (ghosthood) on her for the benefit of eternal worship of Siva. As per her wish, true fiana {jndna, knowledge) permeated her mind while she was skeletonized. The rain of flowers, the tunes of the divine music, the great eclat among the rsis and the ecstatic dance of the Sivagarias coincided with the reverential transformation of Punidavati. Her relatives were alarmed and went away worshipping her. With the blossoming of Siva.-nana, she sang the Arpuda 7 iruvandddi on Siva. Later, she composed the T/ruv/ru/'/ui Mun/mfl/az, again on Siva. Then, she went northwards to meet Siva in His holy abode, the Kayilai Mountain (Kailasa). Her ghastly appearance terrified and dispersed the people who met her. She never minded that. She needed recognition by Siva only. Hence her little concern over the mundane views about her appearance. Crossing rapidly the nor¬ thern countries, she reached the foot of the Kayilai. Instead of

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scaling that holy mountain by foot, she resorted to climb it by head. Parvatl, the consort of Siva, noticed the bony spectre ascending the Kayilai by head and expressed wonder. Siva told Parvati that she was His devotee who sought and got that noble, form. At her approach, Siva addressed her as “Ammai” (mother) and accosted her. Calling Him “Appa” (^father), she prostrated before Him. Thereupon, Siva readily granted her wishes, viz., everlasting and delectable ^iva-bhakti; termination of birth (personal salvation); if, perchance, born again, never to forget Him (the state of perpetual Siva-consciousness, unworried about and unwearied of being born again); and, singing joyously His glory while witnessing His dance from below His holy feet. Siva then bid her go to Tiruvalangadu^*’ in the South (the Tamil land) for witnessing His dance, deriving Sivananda (bliss of Siva) and singing His glory for ever. Worshipfully bidding Him adieu, she left for Tiruvalahgadu by head. She had the darsana of Siva there. Delightfully watching His tdndava (fierce dance), she celebrated it in her devotional hymns, known as the Tiruvdlahgattu Mutta Tinippadigams. Since then she always remained under the lifted foot of the dancing Siva.^’^ Karaikkal Ammaiyar is alluded to by the Tevdrdni psalmists, namely Tirunana Sambandar, Tirunavukkarasar and Sundaramurthi.^^ So, she lived before the Tevdrdm times. When her compositions are compared with the Sahgam works and the Tevaram hymns, it appears that she belonged to the period inter¬ vening between the Satigam Age and the Tevaram epoch. In all fairness, she may be assigned to the fourth-fifth centuries ad. In the Ydpparunkalam Virutti Urai, the commentator gives a stanza'^^ by Bhudattar and Karaikkal Peyar to illustrate the Aridam type of poem. Some presume that this Bhudattar was the same as Bhudattalvar and conclude that Karaikkal Ammaiyar and Bhudattalvar were contemporaries.^'^ They are clearly misled by the similarity in the names “Bhudattar” and “Bhudattalvar”. There is no evidence to prove that these two were one and the same. The biographical account of Karaikkal Ammaiyar does not evince anything to make the claim that she was a party to this joint authorship. The men¬ tioned illustrative stanza is perhaps an interpolation. In fact, Nachchinirkkiniyar, the reputed medieval commentator, puts an end to this dicussion. Citing the same stanza in his commentary on the Tolkdppiam-Pondadhikaram, he gives the names of Avvaiyar and Karaikkal Ammaiyar as its authors.

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In the study of Karaikkiil Ammaiyar, there is an interesting but intriguing controversy connected with her original name. She is generally known by three names: Karaikkal Ammaiyar, Peyar and Punidavati. While the name “Karaikktll Ammalyfir” does not pose any problem, the controversy centres round the other two names. In the name “Karaikkal Ammaiyar”, the “Ammaiyar” is honorific and refers to her since Siva is believed to have addressed her so,^^ while “Karaikkal” denotes her native place about which there pre¬ vails complete unanimity of opinion. Her original name, as givert by Sekkijar, is Punidavati^'^ and he was the first to divulge it. Noneof the pre-Sekkilar Saiva leaders like Tirunana Sambandar, Tirunavukkarasar, SundaramOrthi and Nambi Andar Nambi has men¬ tioned her as “Punidavati”. Even as lale as the eighteenth century,. Tiruvavaduturai Sivanana Munivar preferred to call her simply “Karaikkal Ammaiyar”.Now, it is argued that “Punidavati” wasan imaginary name and that “Peyar” was her original name.^® In support of this, the internal evidence from her poetical works is cited, as she calls herself “Karaikkal Pey.”^® This is reinforced by Sundaramurthi’s reference to her as “Peyar”.In the first place,, the name “Punidavati”, whether original or invented, fits Karaikkal Ammaiyar will, because it means and denotes an impeccable pureperson. Next, Karaikkal Ammaiyar, in one of her poems, describesherself as a “Pen Pey” (female ghost).In another context, she emphatically states her position as “Peyaya Nal Ganattil Onraya Nam”.“^ It means that she belonged to the Sivaganas, namely the virtuous host of ghosts. Hence Sekkilar’s remark that her ghost form drew veneration from both the celestials and the terrestrials. From the days of Karaikkal Ammiyar to those of Tiruvavaduturali Sivahfma Munivar, every Saiva dignitary who referred to her either as “Pey.lr” or as “Karaikkal Ammaiyar” did so reflecting only upon the post-transformation stage of her life. It may be noted that Sekkilar too refrained from using the name “Punidavati” after her metamorphosis. The pertinent question, however, is whether theappellation “Peyar” is indicative of her spiritual status. In the Sahgam works, there are references to the Pey MagaHr and the Pey Pendir. They were priestesses. Pey Maga! Ijaveyini, a poetess of the Sahgam period, is an instance. In her name, “Ilaveyini” means that she was born of the hunter community and “Pey Maga!” Signifies that she was a priestess. “Karaikkal Ammaiyar described as a Pey was perhaps a Devaralti or a priestess and so a Pey Magal

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-

officiating in the worship of Siva.”^^ Incidentally, even the namesof the first three Alvars in Sri Vaisnavism (Poigai, Bhudam and P6y, grouped together as the Mudal Alvars) are symbolic and not literal. The speculations regarding her assumption of “ghosthood” vary. It is perhaps an indication of remaining completely detached from worldly fetters. With a supreme unconcern for the physique, she might have starved so much to become very thin and to facilitate the promotion of her soul. Probably, such an appearance enabled her to avoid others and continue the Siva-puja undisturbed. The main point, however, is that she gave up her domestic life and worldliness only when her husband deserted her. Till then she was performing her duties both as a housewife and as a devotee of Siva. When her husband no longer needed hei, she was exclusively in thedomain of Siva. Therefore, it was a total renunciation on her part; that includes her flesh, beauty and youthfulness as well. She emer¬ ged a staunch votary of Saivism, dedicating herself to Siva entirely. It is said that “the victories won for the cause of Saivism were through miracles”,performed not by the Nayanmars alone but by Siva too. Thrice in Karaikkal Ammaiyar’s life, Siva did miracles— twice to get her divine mangoes and the third time to change her figure. What is the rationale behind this Siva-//7a ? It involves the principle of election, notable in the Saiva Siddhanta. Briefly stated, “Siva chooses His devotees”. Superb devotion was the raison d'etre in the operation of Siva’s grace in favour of Karaikkal Ammaiyar.. In her own words, ever since the days she learnt to speak as a child, she excelled in her loving piety to Siva and attuned her thoughts to His holy feet.“® Here extraordinary &iva-bhakti is fur¬ ther unravelled when she firmly states that her adoration for Siva would remain always unsevered in her heart even if He did not condescent to weed out her misery, show her compassion and indi¬ cate the True Path to her.“' In Tamil Saivism, the respect shown to the Sivanadiyars tantamounts to respecting Siva Himself. This respect does not stop short with the mental, visual and verbal processes, but extends to the realm of meeting their needs. The main service, of course, is offer¬ ing them food. This is technically known as MaheWara Puja. Karaikkal Ammaiyar's life is a pointer in this respect.-® Apart from her, the Nayanmars like lyarpagai, Ilaiyankudi Maran, Appudi

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Adigal and Siruttondar have worshipped the Sivanadiyars. The' Afpuda Tinivandadi, the Tinivirattai Manimalai^ and the Tinivdlangdttu Mutta Tiruppadigams constituted Karaikkal Ammaiyar’s devotional works. They are included in the eleventh However, at no stage in the account of her lite has there been any reference to her gaining of literary knowledge o any other scholarship, although her ^\v^-bhakti and service to t e Sivanadiyars have been spoken of. But, Sekkilar has pointed ou her attainment of Nana'^o at the time of the devolution of spiritual form upon her. That resulted in her devotional outpourings. Further, out of the sixty-three Nayanmars only seven were versi¬ fiers and their works form part of the twelve Tirumurais. The seven who have that distinction are the three Tevdram hymnologists, Karaikkal Ammaiyar Tirumular, Aiyadigal Kadavan Kon an Cheraman Perumal. Therefore, Karaikkal Ammaiyar has an exalted position in both Tamil and Saivism. The Arpuda Tiruvandddi is held to be the first among her works. It belongs to the Andadi category of the Prabandhas and has one hundred and one Venbas. The prefix “Arpuda” does not mean “wonder” but “Nana” out of which the work arose.While ex¬ plaining the meaning of “Arpuda Murthi”, Saiikara Namafivayar says that “Arpuda” stands for “Nana.”^“ According to Madurai Sivaprakasar, the Nana derived from divine grace is the one that was possessed by those life the Muvar Mudaligal (^Tivdrma-tvio) and Karaikkal Ammaiyar.^^ Therefore, it is no wonder that the Arpuda Tiruvandddi penetrates the inscrutable Siva-iidnaA^ Moreover, Karaikkal Ammaiyar has the credit of having created the first wholesome Andadi in Tamil. In the Padirruppattu, a Sahgam work, the Fourth Ten by Kappiyarru Kappiyanar is an Andadi. But, in this Andadi, the last word of the work lacks synchronization with the commencing word of the work, though the last word in each verse synchronizes with the first word of the immediately following verse. The Arpuda Tiruvandddi, however, is the earliest in Tamil possessing all the features of an Andadi. It is a simple and pleasing work, capable of melting the hearts of the devotees. It dwells upon the deeds, reputation and manifestations of Siva and also exposes the spiritual experiences of Karaikkal Ammaiyar. The Tinivirattai Maniindlai^^ has twenty verses. Retaining the features of an Andadi, it is woven into a garland of poems consis¬ ting of ten Kattalai Kalitturais and ten Venbas, the former ten

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preceding the latter ones. Among the Irattai Manimalais available in Tamil, that of Karaikkal Ammaiyar is belived to be the earliest. The ten Kattalai Kalittufois by her opened up a new vista in Tamil poetical composition and became specimen for the later-day poets. Moreover, certain intricacies of Saivism relating to the significance of prononucing the Pancaksara,^*^ of worshipping the Lord’s feet,^'^ of meditating upon Siva,^® and of respecting the Sivanadiyars^® are found embedded in the Tiruvirattai Manimdlai. The Tiruvulangdttu Mutta Tiruppadigams are just two decads on the presiding deity of the Tiruvalangadu Siva temple. Each decad ipadigam) has eleven songs. Both the decads describe Siva’s dance, the burial ground as the stage exhibiting the dance and the deeds of the ghosts there. The first decad commences with the words “Kohgai Tiratigi” and the second decad with the words “Etti Ilavam”. The elevenih song in each of these decads is the Tiru Kadaikkappu (closing verse). These set certain remarkable literary trends for the future. One, the vogue of calling ten songs collectively as a padigam emanated in the days of Karaikkal Ammaiyar and was well established during the Tlvdram period. Karaikkal Ammaiyar thus emerges as a pioneer in the art of composing padigams. Hence the attribute “Mutta” (senior) to her decads. Two, the utility of the Tiru Kadaikkappu in the historical, literary and religious arenas is real. The Tiru Kadaikkappu of the “Kongai Tirahgi” decad and that of the “Etti Ilavam” decad disclose the name and native place of their authoress as “Karaikkal Pey”. Further, they specify the benefits accrued by reciting them, viz., Siva-gati and bliss if the “Kongai Tiratigi” decad is mastered; and, nullification of sins if the “Etti Ilavam” decad is recited. The concluding verse of the Arpuda Tiruvandddi too mentions “Karaikkal Pey” and assures of union with Siva as an outcome of the immesurable love towards Him unleashed by reciting the work. Perhaps the advice given at the end of such works “induced one to read the verses and derive the spiritual merit mentioned therein. Possibly, this indirectly helped the growth of Saivism.”^" In later times, Tirumuiar (fifth-sixth centuries ad) in his Tirmnandiram, Parana Devar (different from the Sahgam poet Paranar) in his Sivaperuman Andddi, Tirunana Sambandar and Sundaramurthi in their Tivdram hymns employed this technique of Karaikkal Ammaiyar. Three, she has yet another credit of setting her two padigams to music. The “Kohgai Tirahgi” decad is set to the Nattapadai tune and the “Etti Ilavam” decad is

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N. Jagadeesan

•set to the Indalam tune. In Tamil literature, setting devotional songs to music is traceable to the Paripcldal. But, among the sixtythree Nayanniars, K.araikkal Ammaiyar was the first to combine music and versification. According to the Sikkilar Purdnam, the three great Nayanmars who possessed both the literary and musical .skill were Karaikkal Ammaiyar, Tirufiana Sambandar and Tirunavukkarasar.'^i Music is a medium or method of approaching the Almighty for praising His traits and of invoking His compassion. So, music is closely knit in the temple worship, apart from being an integral part of the social life. Like that, dance too embroiders the religious fabric. Hence Karaikkal Ammaiyar s characteristic but succinct message, “Padi Ada” (by singing and dancing), to the ■devotees. In her poems, she addresses Siva mostly as “Endai” (my father) or as “Appa” (father). She exhorts the people to enshrine Him in their thoughts, ^^an easy approach Siva resides in the thoughts of the true devotees.'^'! Textual knowledge leads nowhere, as He ■appears in the form in which He is thought of.^^^ Wherever He might be, surely He is very near and that too in the heart itself. He is the earth, water, fire, wind, space, sun, moon and soul, and thereby manifesting Himself as the Astamurti.'^^ He creates, destroys •and protects.^® Those who worship Him with the realization that -nothing happens without His will are protected by Him from being born again.He sees Himself, graces the soul with the knowledge to see and then through that knowledge sees along with the soul.^° ■Only His grace ends birth and shows the Truth that leads to Liberation.^i Even if destined to undergo seven births, service is to Siva •only, and to none else.'^''^ While facing formidable sufferings. He must be praised without losing heart.He protects those who surrender to Him.®^ To conquer death, to avoid hell and to destroy Parma, surrender to Him.^^ He cannot bear the sight of the suffer¬ ings of the devotees.^® At the very sight of the shadow of those who worship His true devotees, karma disappears.^'^ In serving His •devotees and in doing Siva-puja lies the blemishless pride. Pronouncing the Pancaksara, the mantra par excellence, leads to the Lord’s feet.®“ Even those who lead a faultless life are burnt in the bean of dry wood after death and, therefore, the greatness of ■Siva must be realized before that occurs.**^ The later-day Tamil '.Saivisin reflects Karaikkal Ammaiyar’s religious views consistently. Outside the purview of religion, her works win appreciation for

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their lucidity and outspokenness: Some of her poems are quite enjoyable on account of the spotless innocence and natural humour as well as the intimacy while conversing with Siva contained in them. For instance, she asks Siva what would He do if Parvati, on His left side, came to know of the presence of Gahga on His head.^^ Then, she wants to know what would Siva do if the Ganges flows out torrentially by piercing His matted hair and carrying the cres¬ cent and the sanke away.*^- She is at a loss to understand how His neck turned dark while the mouth that ate the posion did not.®^ Then, she enquires Siva whether His dance in the burial ground was meant for Parvati to see or done for the sake of the ghosts (Siva-ganas).®^ With an amazing frankness she tells Siva, “How can I approach You with Love when the coiling snake and the chain of skulls are on You?”'’’^ Referring to the snake on Him, she advises Siva thus; “Never touch that hissing jhis advice displays snake.”'56

the motherly care and desire to ward off any possible harm to Siva. The legend that Siva regarded her as His mother was perhaps founded on the words expressive of her concern for Him. References ’G.U. Pope (tr.), The Tinndcitaiam, p. Ixvii. “Vide Kalciikkci/anjirin, vol. VI, p. 625. ■’Book. XI, chap. 5, ?ma Parvan, p. ^.13 141 '^K.C. Varadachari, The Alydrs of South India.

The Hymi^ of the

J.S.M. Hooper in History of the Indian Philosophy, ed., S.N.

^sgup

^^Vaisnava Literature, Ih Prema Nandakumar, Cultural Herita^ vol. V, pp. 1181T. ^*Divya Prabandha, vol* IV.

jvars,

. f

17 Bhaktism in Medieval Tamilnad N. SUBRAHMANIAN

Evolving man had wanted both a protection from fear and a haven of hope to help him move forward into an unfettered future. This twin need had determined his religion and concept of God in the field of spirit, as also his discoveries and inventions in the field of matter. Fear and not love, as anthropologists will attest, was the starting point of primitive man’s religion. The role of the magicianpriest in ancient religion was also to instil fear of the unknown among his constituents and hope of reward if that unknown were sufficiently and suitably requited. In India when Vedic sacrificial magic had reached its manifest limits and when enquiries about the imagined unknown could yield no positive answers in the Upanisadic discourses, man wanted to go back to the old tactics of coax¬ ing by love and pacifying by yielding. A combination of love and yielding is known by the generic name bhaktV. Though it is a combination, the outer coat is love leading to ecstasy and the inner core fear leading to surrender. The Vedic sacrificial religion was a contractual religion in which rewards were exchanged by I'sis and devas', each periodically getting what he wanted from the other, and each occasionally threatening to withhold the essential needs of the other. Thus it was contractual. The bhakti scheme was and could be described as, feudal wherein it is not a case of two equal contract¬ ing parties being contemplated, but two unequal parties—the deity and the devotee, the former of which provides protection {abliaya} for surrender (prapatti) received from the latter. When the bhakti scheme came in, the deity had been assumed as of immeasurably superior status—the universal, the eternal, the creating sustaining destroying force, the all-fearful and the all merciful and so on, with all humanly imaginable qualities; and the devotee as a humble spark in the spectrum of life and death, entirely at the mercy of the deity. This notion naturally has a stronger component of fear than of love; a special mixture of the two in a

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certain proportion can lead to hysterics called ‘ecstasy’ and other mystic phenomena. While bhakti, in the Hindu context, can be thought of as an integral and natural development, it can also be imagined to be an answer or the Buddha’s religion of ‘ethics in morality’. Neither Vedic rituals nor the intellectual quests of the Upanisads could provide a sufficient answer to the challenge of the Buddha’s insis¬ tence on ‘goodness’ rather than on ‘piety’. The Hindu reaction was to create an extra dose of piety and equate it with goodness and subsume all ideas of ethics in the grace of God and the fate of man. That way also, it may be imagined, bhaktism came in and became relevant and useful. Bhakti has other obvious advantages over the complicated ritualism of the sacrifices, and over the pain inherent in penances and other austerities. Bhakti is simple, easily given, open to all and does not involve any extra or special exertion. The occasions of feeding the deity can be celebrated as gay festivals for the ordinary human beings. Thus it comes to pass that the popula¬ rity of bhakti surpassed the efficacy of the sacrifice, the curiosity of the Upani'iadic knowledge seeker or the consequences of penance. The major element of bhakti from the devotee’s point of view was surely surrender to the lord, and it did not always involve this ritual of a penitence as required in Christianity. The grace of God will look after the rest. Of course there are nuances in the theory of bhakti, but generally speaking it is supposed to be a characteristic of God to overlook every other failing of the devotee provided he totally and finally surrendered to His will. This doctrine in its broad but unmistakable outline was traced, one would think, for the first time in the Bhagavad-Gitd: the element of bhakti in the Ramciyana, the Mahdbhdrata and the Vism Purdna seems to have been provided sharper edges retrospectively in the reverse light of the Gita. Now the Gita, therefore, can be taken to be the most important starting point in the evolution of the Hindu religion, especially for the reason that after it was preached, bhakti has dominated Hinduism, in spite of occasional and excessive intellectualism as can be seen, e.g., in Sankara. In the Tamil country, in the Sarigam age, the tradition of bhakti to Siva, Visnu, Balarama, Murugan and many other minor deities including the Goddess of learning and Indra, the celestial king and even the Moon God—apart from a number of demons—became a way of life which did not too much interfere with the broad

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secularly of their public or private life. Whatever be the offering to the deity (whether it be rice or mutton), whatever be the mode of worship i.e. whether by devil-dancing or by Vedic chanting, whether it was associated with demons resident in hills, trees and rivers, bhakti was bhakti. The more primitive and perhaps on that account more genuine bhakti was described as being superior to the sophisticated Vedic worship-forms favoured by the brahamnas, this is seen in the Kammappa Nayarar Purana of the Periya Puranam of Sekkilar. In the Tirumwigaruppadai, Paripddal and in the many prefatory verses prefixed to the Sangam anthologies, one sees the nucleus of Tamil bhakti literature. But it was not very much in the foreground. Bhakti then had not ousted any legitimate secular concern of man from the scheme of human things. But after that age had come to a close and after the Kalabhra period also had passed, the true bhakti age in the history of the Tamils began, and it lasted from the sixth century ad to the end of the Vijayanagara period and has survived that period too, but in a sporadic and repetitive way. This period of bhakti can be further analysed into two broadly recognisable divisions. The earlier phase was one of a number of saintly and pious persons who, endowed with poetical and musical talents, fitted well with the equipment needed to move to common man to religious fervour (in which the pleasures of relief from intellectual exertion were perhaps even greater than the ecstasies of God-realisation) wandered about the country, visited temple after temple and sang hymns of praise of deities presiding there and drew a vast following which slowly became God-conscious in their own way. The miracles attributed to these saints should have gone a long way to impress the multitude with the spiritual efficacy of bhakti.

These men belonged either to the Vaisnavite sect or to the Saivite. The former were not saddled with as many responsibilities as the latter for they could content themselves with singing the praises of their chosen lord, mostly Sri Raiiganatha in Srlraiigam, or any version of Visnu or his avatdras anywhere but the Saivites had to tackle many problems simultaneously. The Saivism which has been prevalent in the Tamil country before the advent of the Nayanmirs was a strange and repulsive mixture of Pasupataism, Kalamukhaism etc. some of which indulged In primitive orgies like using human skulls as begging bowls etc. This

Bhaktism in Medieval Tamilnad

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brand of Saivism had somehow to be stopped for it was easilybecoming a target of Buddhist and Jain sarcasm and criticism. That is why they adopted the creed of non-violence more seriously and conceived of Siva as the embodiment of love and grace; the newly emerging Saivism had to adopt vegetarianism in an extreme form. This effort of reforming Saivism by removing the more primitive elements from it was the first task of the apostles of the new Saivism. Their second step was to attack Buddhism and Jainism on their home ground and accuse the former of atheism and the latter of ineffective magic and worshipping of false gods; this was facili¬ tated by their giving up to a large extent many of their earlier socio¬ religious practices; the third task commenced after they had assured themselves of the victory of reformed Hinduism over the heretical religions. They also fought a religious civil war with Vaisnavism which was also becoming a driving force in the Tamil country from about the sixth century ad. In fact, a study of the Saivite religious hymns and their hagiology as narrated in the Periya Purdnani of Sekkilar, shows how the Saivites launched all the assault more or less from the same time; but we get no account of how the others reacted to these attacks. The Buddhists, Jains and the Vai?navites have no accounts of serious anti-Saivite activity. They seem to have been mostly on the defensive, except for Vaisnavism which just contented itself with denying the claims of the Saivites of the supremacy of Siva. In the earlier stages it appears as if the Vaisnava hymnists were accommodative and in a mood to reconcile the conflicting claims of the worshippers of Siva and of Narayana by deliberately putting forth the Hari-Hara cult and a theory of the ulti¬ mate equation of Siva with Narayana. This happened in the days of the first three Alvars of the Vaisnava canon, known in Tamil as the mudal Ajvars (the Pey, Bhudam and Poygai Alvars). The exclusivism of the Saivites, however, seems to have driven the Vaisnavas deep into the opposite camp and made them fiercely anti-Saivite. It seems to be the fate of theism to be engaged all the time either in attacking on an equally popular theism or to be constantly comba¬ ting claims of competing deities within the four walls of the same brand of religious system. Neither the Saivites nor the Vaisnavites ever denied the Vedas or the supremacy of the brahmanas in the social order; so their membership in the Hindu fold was as usual. The schisms may be attributed to the veritable consequences of the earlier politheism. But these sects did not coexist peacefully as is

184

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claimed usually by many historians of Indian culture; they were bitterly hostile to each other. The bhakti movement in Tamilnad was spearheaded by a group of Vaisnava saints called Alvars (those who dive deep in the ocean of the Lord’s merciful greatness) and group of Saiva saints called Nayanmars (the leaders in religious thought and in the worship of the Lord). For the Vaisnavas the Lord is Narayana and to the Saivas §iva. It is difficult to assess the relative strength of the popular following in the case of these sects; it may be stated that with earlier stages of this movement, Saivism was dominant, while in the later stages Vaisnavism took over. The extraordinary popula¬ rity of Vaisnavism was not with Ajvars but with Ramanuja of the twelfth century ad while Saivism had achieved most of its objectives during the period between Sambandar and Manikkavacagar (between seventh and ninth-tenth century ad). The triumph of Vaisnavism was achieved mostly by the philosophers, Ramanuja and his successors, as also by the illustrious commentators on the Alvar hymns. The Thevaram hymns of the Nayanmars had no such commentators and there was realty no Saivite religious tradition which built up a philosophical school entirely or at least largely based on Thevaram theology. The later Saivite tradition was based on the Saiva Siddhanta metaphysics for which the basic text was Sivajndnabodham of Meykandar. In the case of the Vaisnavas, however, though Ramanuja commented only on the Brahma Sutras, he and his followers considered the hymns of the Alvars as no less sacred than the Vedas; and the Tenkalai sect among the Sri-Vaisna¬ vas held the A}var hymns as the real basis of their faith. So Saivism and Vaisnavism had different paths of evolution, though broadly speaking, they were both hhakti paths. It is to be noted that in the Tamil country three phenomena of a related nature occurred more or less during the same period of time. In the bhakti movement had to be sustained not only a number of saintly persons endowed with the gift of song and verse going about creating piety among the laity, but also a number of sacred shrines in which to worship the preferred gods and also the authoritative and sacred texts needed to guide the modes of worship and to provide the techniques of temple construction and icon-making: in short the simultaneous occurrence of a number of sacred hymnists, sacred shrines and sacred guiding texts created the objective conditions of the bhakti movement. It would be histo-

Bhaktism in Medieval Tamilnad

185

rically correct to say that the bhakti movement was made possible by the accidental occurrence of these three phenomena at the same time. That is how the nucleus of most of the great temples of Tamil land came to be built then, that is during the Pallava period; its maturity is seen during the Cola and Pandya periods and embellishing culmination during the Vijayanagara period. The phenomenal growth of Vaisnavism and Saivism in the Tamil country should not be supposed to have completely done away with Buddhism and Jainism here. Many famous Tamil literary pieces were created by the Buddhists and Jains, like Jivakacintdmani, Virasoliyam, etc., and these seem to have had considerable influence not only on the students of literature but even on the common people. The story of the circumstances under which the Periya Purdnam was written, as tradition has it, indicates the Cola king s anxiety to stop the spreading influence of Jainism made him encourage §ekki!ar in the composition of the account of the lives of the Nfiyanmars. Buddhism did not die out till the days of Virarajendra, while Jainism continued to flourish in important pockets of Tamilnad. So it is an exaggeration when it is said that Buddhism and Jainism were wiped out from the Tamil country by the exer¬ tions of the Saivites and Vaisnavites. Apart from these developments there was a third religious force represented by the Siddhas becoming a power to be reckoned with especially in the field of religio-mystic thought. Tirumular the most important name in this tradition wrote the Tirwnandiram where he expounded the principle and precepts of Saiva mysticism^. It is interesting to note that practically all the Siddhas were Saivite mystics, i.e. from Tirumular to Ramaliriga Swamy who lived in the nineteenth century. These Siddhas were miracle-men who believed in the possibility of the monadic transformation of the body. Among the Vaisnavas, some of the .Alvars like Nammalvar were mystics, but the Saivite mystic tradition is more predominant in the south. They counted among their illustrious saints the great renouncer Pattinattar. An extreme desire of physical immortality combined with serious asceticism was the hallmark of this group of religious men. In their own way they spread a form of god-experience among the multitude. One final world has to be said about the hhakn movement. In theory as well as in fact the bhakti way is open to all irrespective of caste creed and sex. But the Hindu social organisation is thrown

186

N. Subrahmanian

into the varnd^rama framework which is based on a philosophy of inequality. At the same time it was also a fact that the unequal and hierarchic society did not object to bhakti which preached the right of all equally to approach God through the path of devotion and that of equality in social context. This contradiction cannot be overlooked. It is a question how these two could coalesce and what effect bhakti had on the social organisation. The simple and suitable answer is that bhakti was not concerned with the social relations among men but dealt only with God-Man relation as all religions do. It laid down the principle of equality among all persons in the presence of God and of the social respectability of pious persons even belonging to the lower castes. In this way its exponents—bar¬ ring the more radicals—were able to avoid the essential an achronism between the traditional Hindu social philosophy and bhakti egalitarianism.

18 A Note on the Bhakti Movement in Tamilnad R. MEENA

The bhakti movement in Tamilnad, launched especially by the Vaisnavas and the Saivas, had initially two goals before itself—to exterminate the supposed heretical systems like Buddhism and Jainism and to reform the orthodox sects by a kind of purging the forces of ritualism, external formalities, vulgar and cruel practices and the like. These two purposes were served to a great extent, not so much by scriptural interpretations, but by the active efforts of a number of devoted saints, belonging to both the camps, whose messages were spread far and wide during the period between the sixth and tenth centuries of the Christian era—a period during which the later Pallava kings ruled from Kanchi and the Pandyas of the Kadungon family reigned from Madurai. The period between the fourth and sixth centuries ad, which

marked the end of the Saiigam age, was significant in the history of Tamilnad, because it offered the prototype of all the subsequent and successive periods Tamil history in regard to certain basic of

characteristics, till the advent of the British rule. In the field of religion there was a marked contrast between the ideas of the Sahgama age and those of the subsequent periods. While in the Sahgama age, which was characterised by a spirit of toleration, religion was the means to an end, in the subsequent periods it came to be regarded as an end in itself, the prime concern of society Thus the period between c. ad 600 and 1000 became ideally suited for a struggle of survival between Vaisnavism and Saivism on the one hand and between these sects and Buddhism and Jainism on the other. . . . . This did not however mean a forcible extermination of the rival creeds. It was a fight on ideological ground in which the Vaisnavas and the Saivas banked on the concept of bhakti for extending their sphere of influence. But bhakti was not a new-fangled idea. It was quite known to the devotees of the Sahgam age when the question of religious rivalry did not arise, and no new interpretation of it

188

R. Meena

was needed to suit the changing demands of time and to sharpen the denominational and sectarian fervours in all religious camps. From an historical point of view, the bhakti mode of worship was initiated by the teachings of the Bhagavadgitd in the panIndian context. During the Kalabhra interregnum when the Impe¬ rial Guptas were ruling in Magadha, there was the introduction of classical Hinduism spreading itself through Sanskrit and exerting great influence all over India. The south could not avoid this influ¬ ence. Tamilnad emerged from the Kalabhra period with the torch of bhakti held aloft and burning into two flames—Saivite and Vaisnavite bhaktism. But at the same time it has to be admitted that in a subsequent period when the fire of bhakti was waning in the north and was going to be nearly extinguished, it was the flames from the south that revitalized it. Among the two aspects of the Hindu bhakti movement in Tamilnad there were points of agreement as well as of discord. The Saivite bhaktism became prominent in the seventh century with the appearance on the scene of Sambandar and Appar, the first two of the four Saiva Samayacaryas. It was manifest even earlier when Nakkirar was writing his Thirumuriigattruppadai and Karaikkal Ammai was singing the Thimvalangattu. But the effective movement is rightly dated from the early seventh century AD. This holds good generally speaking for Vai?navism also. Of the twelve Alv irs, except the first three who formed a separate category, the rest belonged to the same period to which the Saiva Samayacaryas belonged. That is to say, the two main streams of bhaktism were running parallel to each other and were covering the same period of time. The Vaisnavite bhakti movement culmi¬ nated in Ramanuja’s commentary on the Brahma Sutras, well known as the Sribhdsiya and that the Saiva bhaktism was consuminated by Meykandar’s Sivajhdnabodhani, the basic text of the Saiva Siddhanta philosophy. The Saiva bhakti movement was initiated and spread by four Samayacaryas and sixty-three Nayanmars. Likewise the Vaisnava bhakti movement was launched by twelve Ajvars. The first three of them Pey, Budhan and Poggai—were known as Mudal Alvars and they represented an earlier tradition. Their outlook differed from the rest, especially from that of Nammalvar, Periyalvar and Thirumangaialvar. The Mudal Alvars praised both Visnu and Siva at the same time and viewed the Almighty in Harihara form.

A Note on the Bhakti Movement in Tamilnad

189

'

Their poems exhibited no sectarian antagonism, though a prefer¬ ence to Visnu was obvious. On close scrutiny of the devotional literature of the Saivas and the Vaisnavas it transpires that the Saivas were definitely more aggressive and outspokenly hostile towards their rival creeds. In course of time both the streams received their respective form and distinctiveness in the hands of eminent scholars, commentators and devotees. The Saiva Siddhanta school, as we have seen above, was the logical culmination of the Saiva bhakti movement initiated by the Samayacclryas and Nayanmars. The followers of this system remained as a single body for a long time avoiding all sorts of schisms. But this did not hold good in the case of the Vaisnavas. After Ramanuja, Sri-Vaisnavism split into two minor denomina¬ tions, which were intramural, but keenly critical of each other. These groups were known as Tenkalai and Vadakalai, meaning the southern and the northern, the former representing a liberal and the latter a conservative tradition. Apart from differences in regard to the doctrinal interpretations, these two groups maintained social differences as well. This difference went even to the extent of preventing intermarriage between them. Some other historical considerations may also be taken into account in the understanding of the nature of bhakti movement in this part of the country. From the very beginning the Vaisnava bhaktism was democratic in character and therefore it was able to assemble under its banner persons belonging to different com¬ munities, castes, classes and groups. The emergence of Sankara in the ninth century ad was a turning point in the social evolution o Hinduism His subtle analysis and sophisticated interpretation of the philosophical intricacies had a tremendous influence upon the streams of Indian thought, but so far as his social views were con¬ cerned his sole commitment was to Manu. It was to a certain extent that owing to the influence of his social views a considerable se-tion of the orthodox brahmanas was sliced off into a class that came to be known as Smartas. The leftovers among the brahmanas found their way in Vaisnavism. Saivism per se was adopted only by a large non-brahmana following with a small percentage of exclu¬ sively Saivite Smarta brahmanas. Eauality as a religious principle was extended to the social sphere by the example of Ramanuja, but there were problems as well The Vadakalai, which was a reaction to the liberalism of the

190

R. Meena

Tenkalai, consolidated Vaisnavite orthodoxy and this served to widen the difference between the two camps. The question of democratisation did not probably arise in the case of the Savites. They did not try to bring different communities into one fold. They all remained communally distinct, though the same faith bound them together. Apart from these differences there were Saiva-Vaisnava conflicts as well, which became more marked after the fall of the Vijayanagara empire. Still, both these streams of bhakti had similar objective and operational pattern. Both these streams had derived their main impulses from the earlier devotional hymns of the unsophisticated and unprejudiced saints. Both in the course of their evolution were doctrine-oriented, giving rise to the development of more than one creed followed by sectarian votaries. And lastly, both these streams had to pass through varied social realities as a consequence of which they could not avoid certain contradictions caused by forces which were not originally inherent in them.

19 The Bhakti Movement in Kerala K.K. KUSUMAN

There were two waves of bhakti movement in Kerala, one from seventh to ninth century, directed against Jainism and Buddhism and the second from fifteenth to seventeenth century for relieving Hindu religion from the fissiparous tendencies and the consequent general decay and deterioration into which that religion had fallen. In the first instance, Saivism and Vaisnavism had joined hands to wipe of Jain and Buddhist influence, but during the second move¬ ment it was Vaisnavism that took the lead for inner purification. By the beginning of the twelfth century Co]a threat to Kerala was over and the people, on the whole, lived in splendour and prosperity thanks to the immense economic fortune brought out by the virulent commercial activities with the outside world.^ This state of affair is unmistakably delineated in the vernacular litera¬ tures like Unniyachi charitam, Unnichirutevi charitam and Ananthapura Varnana. Prominent native princes of the time were in the habit of encouraging and honouring pundits and litterateurs and in this connection special reference might be made to the princes of Travancore, Cochin, Calicut and Cannanore.^ The ruler of Calicut held annual assemblies of literary luminaries and pundits who were properly rewarded. This royal incentive and patronage naturally favoured the study of Vedic literatures further and there was an over all conscientious effort to glorify mndudharwa. Consequently there was a spurt of literature in many a branch of knowledge like Mimamsa, Vedanta, grammar, logic, astrology and sculpture. Besides in places like Vaikom, Ravipuram, Irinjalakuda and Trikkanamatilakam, then emerged notable brahmin settle¬ ments. This tendency had its reflection on temples; the number of abode of worship and the embellishments attached to festivals also evinced symptoms of progress and prosperity. Simultaneous with this, one could also notice the tendency of a section of people for pleasure-seeking and amorous life—the

K.K. Kiisuman

192 inevitable result of economic prosperity.

It is this tendency that

converted the devadasis or dancing girls of temples into call girls. Similarly, the system of the eldest son in a brahmin family alone marrying from the same caste and the younger sons entering into sambandham with the Nair women, taking no responsibility to the offsprings born of such connections, created a social structure, where life was wedded to licentiousness and ephemeral pleasures. The literature of the time is reflective of this feature; for one can see a fairly long list of devadasis who were characters in such works. The bliakti movement was a reaction declining

socio-cultural

and

against this fast

religious situation of the period

ranging from fifteenth to seventeenth centuries. It all started with the Krishnagadha of poet Cherusseri (c. 14271500) who was a protege of Udaya Varman, ruler of Cannanore. The poet wanted this work to be devotionally sung by all, especi¬ ally women; attainment of moksa or salvation was the motive of singing Krishnagadha.

He was of firm

belief that by compiling

the work he found a place in the other world i.e., in the world of Lord Visnu. The bhakti movement received substantial contribu¬ tion from Thunchathu Ramanujan Ezhuthachan {c. 1495-1575) who really made the Keralites theists, while Charusseri could only lead the peoples line of thinking towards bhakti.'^ Though a Vaisnavite, Ezhuthachan never considered Visnu and Siva as two entities and he categorically stated that it was ajhdna or ignorace that propelled people to consider them as two separate gods. To get relieved from the hallucination of this material world the only channel is bhakti so stated Ezhuthachan.

While Manu suggests attainment of

sattva gum birth in brahmin caste etc., as preconditions for attain¬ ing mukti, Ezhuthachan indirectly repudiated this cumbersome method by offering to people of all castes the meticulous observ¬ ance of bhakti and thereby attainment of mukti in this life time itself. people

He authored many a work of Kerala.

Among such

Utharardmdyanam, Mahdbhdratam,

insulcating bhakti among the works

Adhydtmardmdyanam,

Devimdhdtmyam,

have been

indisputably attributed to him. Ulloor S. Parameswara Aiyar, was of firm opinion that the authoriship of Harindmaklrtanam, Kaivelyanavanitam,

Cintdratnarn,

Brahmdndapurdnam

Ramayanam

Irupathinaluvritham and Kerala Ndtakam might be attributed to Ezhuthachan only after close scrutiny.-i However, those works, whose authorship have been undoubtedly attributed to him by all.

The Bliakti Movement in Kerala

193

are enough to immortalise him among the Keralites. He made the people conscious of the ephemeral nature of sensuous pleasures; the perpetual character of spiritualism alone was the ultimate solution to the unending problems and sorrows of human life. Prof. K.V. Krishna Ayyar considers Ezhuthachan on a par with the other two mahatmas of Kerala, viz., Sankaracharyar and Sri Naryana Guru and these three, according to him, have really uplifted the people of Kerala at different intervals of time.^ Another notable Visnu devotee of the medieval period was Melpathoor Narayana Bhattatiri, (ad 1559-1620). Born in a Namboodiri family called Melpathoor in the erstwhile native state of Cochin, he mastered the Vedas, logic, grammar etc., at a very early age. Subsequently he got married and became a victim to gout. Since the treatment went ineffective, as a final resort, he bestowed his faith in Guruvayoorappan, the presiding deity at Guruvayoor.*’ Krsna, in his child-form, is worshipped here and Bhattatiri also spent his days in the temple invoking Lord Krsna. He summarised a section of the Bhdgavata into a dasaka and submitted it to the Lord with a prayer to relieve him from the disease. Thus, finally, he completed the Bhdgavata and authored a new work NdrdyaniyamJ It is said, with the completion of Ndrdyanfyam he got cured from gout. It is also said that he had the realisation of Guruvayoorappan while he wrote the 100th sloka.

Guruvayoor at present is the most crowded temple of Kerala; devotees from far and wide reach here for a dar^an of Guruvayoorap¬ pan, who, according to believers, never disappoint bhaktas. But this temple had not attained so much fame in the medieval period; it is Ndrdyaniyam and Narayana Bhattatiri that brought Guru¬ vayoorappan to the notice of the people. Deva Narayanan, the ruler of the petty chiefdom of Ambalapuzha invited Bhattatiri, and at the request of the former he compiled Prakriyd Sarvasvam, a grammatical work. By this work he won the regard of Yajnanarayana Diksitar of Thanjavur and Bhattoji Diksitar, the author of Siddhdnta Kaiimudi. The Ndrdyaniyam consists of 1006 slokas and they are in the

form of direct appealing to the Lord. He establishes the uniqueness of Visnubhakti as means of attaining salvation in the Kaliyuga. In the sublime state of Visnubhakti, he even goes to the extent of degrading Lord Siva a little, nay, this is his attitude towards the

K.K. Kiisuman

194

other Deva^, whose inferiority is delineated by him with a certain amount of prejudice. Since Ndrdyaniyam is the summary of the Bhdgavata, by reading the former, all the benefit of reading the latter can be attained-so goes the belief of devotees. Bhattatiri confirms in the first dasaka itself that Guruvayoorappan is none other than Bhagavan, that is parabrahma. It is admitted that Narayana Bhattatiri has scored profusely in his attempt to charm the people to the path of bhakti in the period of his life time and thereby checked, probably, the ungodly and atheistic life led by them. Poonthanam Namboodiri (c. ad 1547-1640) was yet another poet of the bhakti movement. He was a native of Malappuram in Malabar. Even after a long period of nuptial life he had no issues. Poonthanam, it is said, finally prostrated before Guruvayoorappan, and lived there chanting and singing the glories of the Lord. Thanks to the grace of Guruvayoorappan his wife conceived and she gave birth to a male child. The maiden rice-feeding ceremony to the child was arranged in his house but a few minutes before the stipulated time the child died. To get back the life of the child he once again moved to Guruvayoor. He read SandanagopdJam story and wrote it in Malayalam. Finally, Unnikrishnan (Young Krsna), the presiding deity generated a profound feeling to the effect that so long as the former lived in his mind why should he try for other issues? Thus Poonthanam got rid of the grief and started composing stotras and other devotional works; he made it a point to conduct bhajan on all mondays at Guruvayoor. He also visited other temples and soberly advised the people to sing the virtues of the God. The chief works of Poonthanam, which are really of immeasura¬ ble value to the growth of bhakti movement, are Santhdnagcpdlam, Jhdnappana and Srikrsnakarndmrtam. Besides, Ndrdyana Stotram Vasudevastotram,

Sauristotram,

Haristotram,

Jayakrsnastotram,

Daivamestotram, Vasudeva Balakryaa-stotram and

Anandamritham

have also been written by him. In bhakti literature his place in Kerala is on a par with Ezhuthachan, whose devotional didactism in Adhydtmardmdyanam can be observed in the Jndnappana of Poonthanam. Both unequivocally assure that by chanting bhajan, one can attain salvation in the present life itself. The very incep¬ tion of Jndnappana is by making reference to the importance of ndniajapa; to make the life fruitful, he says, we should always

The Bhnkti Movement in Kerala

195

keep at the tongue-tip, the holy names of God.® Again he says nothing is constant in this world; everything is unknown and ordained by God.^ By chanting, all the purusdrthas can be attained; all can reach Vaikuniha, the abode of Lord Visnu. All are born separately and the same is the case when death occurs; none accompanies us. If so, it is meaningless to quarrel and spoil the time when people meet in this world in between birth and death. From the brahmin to CandfUa, irrespective of any differences, all can realise the goal of life by reciting the name of God. This has been recognised by the Vedas,Acaryas and the Gita. Therefore by chanting the name of God, it may be attempted to attain brahman and thereby seek salvation. By reciting the name of God poverty can be repelled, and wealth will be accrued, jivdtmd and paramcitmu will unite and moksa can be attained. Kurooramma (ad 1570-1640) was a native of Trichur and she became a widow before any issue was born to her. She spent the rest of her life by praising the virtues of Guruvayoorappan. She was a relative of the famous Vilvamangalam Swamiyar of the medieval period. She spent her life by reciting some of the stotras composed by Poonthanam. Renouncing worldly life, she concen¬ trated on moksa by singing devotional songs. Vilvamangalam Swamiyar (ad 1575-1660) was a very learned person and a firm devotee of Guruvayoorappan. However, he was in the habit of visiting other Visnu—Siva temples of Kerala. It is said that by virtue of his hhakti he could see the Almighty by his naked eye and he performed pratitisthd in many an old temple in Kerala. He was chiefly responsible for the reading of Gitagovindd in all Visnu temples. Thus, for about three centuries the hhakti movement in Kerala radiated a new thought-process for the observance of the people. A feeling got currency that self-realisation and salvation could be attained by brahmins, and avarnas alike which in its turn generated self-confidence and self-respect among the latter. But this change did go unaffected to the people below the caste Hindus. The taboo of untoiichability and unapproachability attributed to the non-caste Hindus, incapacitated them the right to worship in temples; even in the twentieth century they had to agitate against the obsolete policies of the caste Hindu-dominated government. Thus whatever n j y tc the logical seqence of the hhakti movement, it had little

K.K. Kusuman

196

relevance and application so far as the above-mentioned people were concerned; to them message of the bhakti movement was a gimmic of the learned with little practical importance. The bhakti movement, it must be noted, could not influence even the elite or the literary luminaries of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The Venmony school of poets in Malayalam literature unmistakably proves the categorical rejection of the message of the bhakti movement. The political works of this school which were fairly popular with the masses, discussed amorus subjects, paying little attention to the call of bhakti movement. The observation of Krishna Chaitanya is worth citing to have a grip over the situation: The poetry of the Venmani group was the output of a leisured elite, most of whom were Namputiris. Thus there were affinities in this situation with that which produced early Manipravalam poetry. The fine-spun texture, which was a prime value with this group—although it was managed mostly by simple Malayalam word and not a rich Sanskrit blend—recalled by association the style of early poetry; and not only the style, but a major preoccupa¬ tion too; and that was sex.^^ Actually the literature of the time was just reflecting the social culture of time when morality gave way to the sensuality of the privileged upper class people in the society. The poets and society of the time are aptly delineated by Prof. T.K. Ravindran while he observes: “This group of poets had no inhibition about morality in poetry, because, in personal life it was not to be seen anywhere around.If the Venmony school found a receptive readers who could share the views of the former it means the sublime spiritual atmosphere generated by the bhakti movement did go unappealing to the masses at large. References

^Kerala Charithram, Kerala History Association, vol. II, p. 527. '“They were petty rulers of Kerala. ’Ibid., p. 538. "Ulloor, Kerala SiHhitya Charitram, vol. II, p. 550. ^Kerala Charithram, vol. II., p. 541. ®It is situated in the present Trichur district.

The Bhakti Movement in Kerala ’Ulloor, op. cit., p. 398. *Jnanappana^ lines 2*4. *lbid., lines 5-14. '“Ibid., lines 275-84. "Ibid., lines 323-25. ^^Srikfsr.a Karmmritam (Mai.), slokas 142-43. '“Krishna Chaitanya, A History of Malayalam Literature, p. 183. '^T.K. Ravindran, Asan and Social Revolution in Kerala, p. ii.

m

20 Medieval Maharashtra and Muslim Saint-Poets NARAYAN H. KULKARNEE

I The medieval Maharashtrian society was an interplay of various religious forces, sects and sub-sects. Politically it was ruled by the Hindu dynasty of the Yadavas till it was invaded and the Hindu rule ended by Alaud-Din Khalji in ad 1239. The Khaljis renamed their capital Devagiri as Daulatabad. After a brief Khalji and Tughlaq interlude the Bahamanis and later their offshoots, viz., Nizamshahs of Ahmednagar, Adilshahs of Bijapur, Qutab Shahs of Bhajanajar (Hyderabad), Baridshahs of Bidar and Imadshahs of Berar became the Muslim rulers of Maharashtra. With the dec¬ line of some of these, Maharashtra became a battleground between the Adilshahs and the Mughal emperors till Shivaji liberated his homeland and declared himself a sovereign in 1674. After his death his son Sambhaji became the Chatrapati in 1680 but was captured by the Mughals and cruelly executed in 1689. The next twenty years or so was the period of Maratha War of Independence till his son Shahu I was released in 1707 to become the Chatrapati. His chief ministers, the Peshwas, became prominent in the eighteenth century till the British overthrew them in 1818. |This political framework and an acquaintance with the prevailing religious sects and sub-sects are essential to the understanding of the nature and importance of the Muslim saint-poets of medieval Maharashtra. While politically it might be a battleground for a while, religi¬ ously Maharashtra was a playground for the interplay of various sects and sub-sects. The Yadava rulers patronised the traditional Vedic religion but its practice in daily life had become much per¬ verted by the monopoly of a few Brahmana pundits who alone understood the Sanskrit language in which the ancient scriptures and texts were written. They dictated the rules of conduct to the illiterate common man according to their whims and fancies with-

Medieval \{aliarashtra and Muslim Saint-Poets

199

out reference to the ethical and moral values which should guide' society. The common man’s superstitious beliefs, his ignorance and simplicity, came to be exploited in the name of religion to the advantage of the Brahmanas. Traditional religion had come to mean either theological obscruantism or rampant ritualism and ultimately ritualistic feeling of the Brahmanas. The Brahmanas, instead of being the spiritual leaders of society were engrossed with the gross materialistic good things of life which they closed in the garb of religion. Their pedantic commentaries and abstruse meta¬ physics could hardly be understood by the common man. The excess to which ritualism had been carried may be inferred from the Vratakhanda, a compilation by Hemadri, a minister of the Yadavas. He prescribed no less than 2,000 rites and ceremonies to be performed in the course of 360 days. Hemadri’s Calurvarga Cintdmani became not only an authority for religious enlightenment but also an excuse for feeding the Brahmanas in propitiation of parti¬ cular deities for almost every day of the year. This tragic lack of wisdom amidst apparently great learning has been aptly compared by Saint Jhanadeva with the plumage of a peacock with eyes all over but lacking in essential vision. If the traditional Vedic religion had become such a parody whom could the common man turn to for his spiritual solace and material rewards as well, if possible but to his village gods? Once again Jhanadeva describes the commoner’s pathetic plight graphically. “The villager worships god after god, goes to a guru and learns some mantra from him, places an image of his choice in a corner at his house, and goes on a pilgrimage to temple after temple. For getting the god at home, he worships the spirits of the dead ancestors with the same devotion as his God, on ekddasJs serpents on ndgpaiicami, Durga, on the fourth of the dark fortnight then Navacaudi on another occasion, Bhairava on Sundays, the linga on Mondays and so on. He worships perpetually without being silent even for a moment, at various shrines, like a courtesan attracting man after man at the entrance to the town; the devotee who thus runs after different gods” says Jhanadeva, “is ignorance incarnate”. But material aspirations were of even greater importance to the common man than spiritual consolation. Certain gods and gurus acquired great fame for the fulfilment of the worldly desires of their devotees. Particularly the animistic god Khandoba of Jejuri (in

200

Narayan H. Kulkarnee

Pune district), who gradually came to be converted into a form of Siva, became extremely popular among the lower classes of Maha¬ rashtra as the giver of all that was desired in worldly matters. Many of the devotees in fulfilment of their vows, walked on fire, hung themselves from hooks in front of the image, pierced their thighs with iron pieces and resorted to many similar barbaric prac¬ tices. Temple prostitution was carried on by muralis who were young girls married to Khandoba and who earned their living by begging and prostitution in Khandoba’s name. Even some married woman abandoned their families in the name of Khandoba and became muralis. It would not be inappropriate to mention here inci¬ dentally, that Lord Gaurahga Prabhu is said to have visited Jejuri in AD 1513. He was deeply moved by the life of vice led by the muralis there and is said to have persuaded one Indira Devi to

abandon her wicked ways. Was the Natha Sampradaya an alternative to the pedantic but perverted Vedic religion or the crude animism in the name of religion which took its place? Dr. N.N. Bhattacharyya in an article traces the Natha sect’s origin to tantrism. Be that as it may, the chief protagonists of this all-India sect (of which Goraksanatha is generally believed to have been the real founder sometime between the tenth and twelfth centuries) in Maharashtra were Gahininatha, and Nivrttinatha the elder brother of Jnanadeva. Presum¬ ably to popularise the sect in Maharashtra Gahininatha mixed devotion to Lord Krsna with yogic sadhana, the basic ingredient of this sect. Hathayoga Pradipika is regarded as the Bible of this sect while Gahininatha wrote Goraksa Gita for the Maharashtrians NivrttinMha was Jfianadeva’s guru and as such Jnanadeva himself was a Nathapanthl. Mukunda Raja, the first great poet of Marathi who compiled Vivekasindhu in ad 1185 is also regarded as a Nathapanthi and to the extent to which he tried to infuse gurubhakti (devotion for the guru) yogic sddhand and experience with Vedanta, perhaps he might be so regarded. Lakshman Shastri Joshi, however, IS of the opinion that Vivekasindhu preaches the Vedanta as profounded by Saiikaracarya. It has to be observed, however, that the

metaphysics and mysticism of Mukundaraja were beyond the com¬ mon man's grasp. Some of his tenets certainly militated against the needs of the situation, namely, that a mystic should never reveal his inner secret lest the people might misunderstand it, and that contemplation of the Paramdtmdn turns back the devotee from the

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world and enables him to see the vision of his self. As far as Jnanadeva is concerned, from the description of Siva and Sakti or the details regarding kundalini and yogamayd in Jhdnesvarl, it could also be deemed to have been influenced by the Natha philo¬ sophy. Jfianadeva’s younger sister Muktabai is supposed to be guru of the Nathapanthi Changdeva. Dr. P.C. Dheve, says however, that Yogini Muktabai is not the same. It has been said that Baba Ratan Haji, a Muslim, was converted to Natha Sampradaya and was responsible in turn for converting many of his co-religionists, to this sect. The Natha Sampradayis have written many Marathi works. But despite these, the sect failed to strike deep roots in Maharashtra probably an account of its excessive emphasis of yogic sddhand of a very strict nature. A separate sub-sect called Kanphatas which specialised in piercing the disciples ears and adorning them with crystalline, metallic or ivory adornments came into being. These adornments themselves came to acquire spiritual significance. Dr. Briggs in his work on the sect is of the opinion that the Muslims gave this name as a pejorative. In course of time it must have deteriorated a great deal. For, saint-poet Tukaram of the seventeenth century makes derisive reference to the Kanphatas. The Mahanubhava sect, unlike the Natha Sampradaya is a typi¬ cally Maharashtrian sect inasmuch as its founder Mahatma Cakradhara enjoined upon his followers to stay in Maharashtra only. The Mahanubhavas are also the progenitors of Maratha prose. Cakradhara died in ad 1274 (a year before Jnandeva’s birth) and thus founded his esoteric order in the heydays of the Yadavas. Although by birth a Gujarati (born in ad 1194), Paithan (in Aurangabad district) became his headquarters, so to say. The Mahanubhavas accept only four incarnations of the Supreme Being and call them Harsa in Krtavuga, Datta in Tretdyuga Sn Krsna in Dvdpiirayuga and Chakradhara himself in Kaliyuga. Their Pancakrsnas are, apart from Sn Kr?na himself, Dattatreya, Charigadeva, Cakrapani, Govindaprabhu and Cakradhara Svami himself. The last three are not legendary gods but the gurus who were responsi¬ ble for the founding and expansion of the sect. According to this sect Sri K’'sna is not an avatara of Visnu but the Parahrahma him¬ self. The Dattatreya of this sect is one-faced but four-handed. Image worship is forbidden but all objects touched by or associated with Cakradhara are held in great veneration. Cakradhara forbade his followers from using new clothes; it meant falling prey to temp-

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tation. Sarhnyasa had great significance for this sect. All the four varnasdiX\d women too could take to samnyasa. The conduct enjoined upon the followers was much more negativistic than positive. These negative regulations merely replaced Vedic ritualism with their own and probably stood in the way of the popularisation of the sect. Some scholars are of the opinion that the Mahanubhavas are opposed to the Vedas; but it would appear that Cakradhara preach¬ ed within the broad framework oi varndsrama dharnia. Only violence involved in the animal sacrifice in Vedic rituals is not acceptable to them. Among their venerated texts like Lila Caritra, Govinda Prabliu Caritra, Sri Krsna Caritra etc. compiled by the followers of the sect may be traced the beginnings of Marathi biography. The Mahanubhava sect in its own way certainly aimed at reforming the traditional Vedic religion as it prevailed in the Yadava days simul¬ taneously with the perversions in the Natha stream after Goraksa Natha. But the negativistic and overwhelming ritualism and its excessive emphasis on sadniydsa for self-realization led to its unpopu¬ larity. The perversities that entered into this sect later attracted adverse notice from Sant Ekanatha as well as Sant Tukaram (of the Warkari Sampradaya). The Sect stood no chance of popularity when Cakradhara went so far as to dub Vitihala, one of the most popular deities of the common man, as a dacoit. Moreover the Mahanubhavas were themselves afraid of their herehtical opinions and so locked up their teachings in secret coded scripts known only to themselves. Yet another attempt to purify and revive the traditional Vedic religion was made by Nfsimha Sarasvati in the fourteenth century by founding the cult of Dattatreya. Nrsimha Sarasvati (1378-1438) is himself regarded as the reincarnation of Snpada Srivallabha of Pithapuram (in Andhra Pradesh). Nrsimha Sarasvati’s life, full of miracles (such as curing the Bahamani king Allauddin by mere blessing) is recounted in Guru Caritra, the Gospel of this sect. Dattareya with three faces representing Brahma-Visnu-Mahesa and the three gurias — Sattva, Rajas and Tatnas—is a popular deity in the Hindu pantheon praised alike by Sant Ekanatha and Sant Tukaram. The drati in praise of Dattatreya by Ekanatha is very popular in this sect itself. Ekanath’s guru Janardana Svami, the ziladar of Daulatabad was a follower of this cult and Ekanatha himself was visited by Lord Dattatreya in the form of a/ay/r. Dasapant whose prolific verse exceeds a lakh was also of an ardent

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follower of the sects. In Maharashtra’s religious life the sect has a place even today. But the reason could be that it is hoped to guarantee material results if one practises a particular way of life {sakama bhakti). Its gospel the Gurucaritra is read by students who want to get through their examinations without reading their books and other persons with similar objects in view. Nrsimha Sarasvati was a strict believer in the varnd^arma dharma and enjoined upon his followers particularly the Brahmanas even more strict regula¬ tions. If we are to believe Gurucaritra, the Bahamanis, the Adilshahs, the Qutubshahs were won over by Nfsimha Sarasvati with his miraculous powers. In a broader perspective his efforts can be regarded as an attempt to reconcile the Muslim rule to the Hindu way of life. But the effort connot be said to have succeeded. The Ananda Sampradaya regards Shahadatta Allama Prabhu who was probably a Muslim convert from Hinduism, as an incarnation of Dattatreya. The god Dattatreya gave darsuna, to his devotees in the form of a faqii. To that extent the Ananda Sampradaya may be regarded either as an Islamic version of Datta Sampradaya or at least as a sub-cult of that sect. To add to the variety of sects in Maharashtra we may mention the Caitanya Sampradaya which, however, has nothing to do with Lord Gauraiiga Prabhu. The warkari Tukaram’s own guru was Baba Caitanya. But the Baba as well as other main exponents of the Caitanya sect were appropria¬ ted by the Muslims as their ally not so much because of their spirituality as for their alleged miraculous powers of granting material rewards. This also happened in respect of saintly persons following the cult of Dattatreya. This was one of the results of Nrsimha Sarasvati’s attempts to reconcile the Muslims to the Hindu way of life if such was his intention. Similarly Raghava Caitanya, probable founder of the Caitanya sect around sixteenth century and his followers Keshava Caitayna, Baba Caitayna and Ananta Caitanya are venerated by the Muslims as Hazrat Ladley Mashykh. Gesu Dasaz, Shaikh Shahabuddin and Shaikh Alauddin respectively. The followers of either Caitanya sect or Ananda sect were limited in Maharashtra; these sects had more influence in the bordering regions of Karnataka. On the border between Karnataka and Maharashtra near Kalyan also flourished the Lingayata sect or Virsaivism. Whether BasaveWara, the minister of king Bijjala Kalacuri of Basava Kalyan was its founder or not, he was certainly its greatest preacher.

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He propagated his new sect in the twelfth century from Basava Kalyan, at present in Bidar district of Karnataka not far away from the bordering district of Osmanabad in Maharashtra. The Lingayatas are known because they wear the linga, representing Lord Siva, which is the size and shape of a small berry encased in a small casket. It hangs from their neck as enjoined upon them by Basavesvara. The sect flourishing mainly on the KarnatakaMaharashtra borders is also of borderline importance in the religious life of medieval Maharashtra. Of greater importance though much smaller in membership is the Nagesa Sampradaya originating from Wadwal Siddha Naganath, a ‘realised’ saintly person believed to have been endowed with miraculous powers {siddha). The followers of this sect have made significant contri¬ butions to Marathi literature. II The above-described^sects and cults were overshadowed by the Warkari Sampradaya, certainly in popularity and in social and even in political significance according to some. The sect is called Warkari because of its annual pilgrimage {wari) to the shrine of Lord Vitthala at Pandharpur (in Sholapur district). It is also described as the cult of Vitthala, or the Bhagvata Sampradaya or the Pandharpur movement. The external mark of the Warkaris is the wearing of a necklace of tulsi seeds; it forbids them from falsehood, adultery, violence, meat-eating and drinking. At the same time it enjoins upon them fasting every fortnight on ekddasi day, annual pilgrimage to Pandharpur in the company of followers in A^adha and Karttika months, the recital of the mantra Rama, Kr''na, Hari as many times as possible, wearing of special madras (marks) on their faces, spending their time in the company of saintly andfreligious persons (satsahga), singing bhajans (devotional songs) ^nd\kir(ans (religious discourses interspersed with songs) are also very2 important for the Warkaris. These external marks have evolved by5 themselves. As a sect it is distinguished by its stress on devotion to and love for God as the major means of selfrealisation and is thus fully in tune with the bhakti movement in other parts of India. Rev. Macnicol speaks eloquently of the ecstasy bordering on which the Warkaris in large groups sing on the banks of the

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Bhima river: On Bhima’s banks all gladness is In Pandhari the abode of Bliss. This is the refrain of many a song that is re-echoed by the choirs of singers that journey with eager expectations, year after year, to Pandharpur to have the darsan of Vitthala. “There is little outwardly to distinguish the worship of this shrine from that of a hundred others throughout the land. The image is rudely fashioned and has no grace of form. The worship is that which is commonly per¬ formed in any Hindu temple. What gives it distinctive character is the special song services, the kirtans and bhajans that are conduc¬ ted for hours at Pandharpur and other centres of the cult (e.g. Nandi, the samadhi of Jnandeva and Dehu, the birthplace of Tukaram, both a few km off Pune) listening to the exhortations of some famous preacher or Haridasa (lit. slave of God) who bases his discourses upon verses from such great saint-poets as Jhanesvara, Namadeva, Ekanatha or Tukaram, with the teaching is skilfully combined the singing of a choir. These kirtans have a profound emotional impact on the multitudes gathered in eager expectation at the holy place. The songs of the old saints awaken and in some degree satisfy the deep desires of their hearts. So also groups will gather for what are called bhajans, when there is no preaching, but they continue often for hours, singing those songs of longing and ecstasy.” The thrill of these gatherings has to be experienced first-hand to be understood. It has also to be noted that a large portion of these bhajans furnished the paslmody of the reforming Prarthana Samaj while some of the greatest of rnodern Indians, such as Justice M.G. Ranade and Sir R.G. Bhandarkar have found in them perhaps more than in the ancient scriptures, nourishment for their own religious life. The verses of Jnanadeva, Namadeva, Ekanatha and Tukaram have been referred to in the above passage. Though nearly fifty different saints may be counted among the Sampradaya’s followers, these four may be called the pillars of the Pandharpur movement. The pioneer was Jnanadeva (or Jnanesvara ad 1275-96) a genius, son of an outcaste Brahmana, apart from performing certain miracles (such as making a buffalo recite Vedas etc.) for the gullible, composed Bhavdrtha-Dipika, popularly called Jndnesvan within.

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Narayan H. Kiilkarnee

that brief life span. It is a Marathi commentary upon the Bhagavad Gita, a popular exposition of a popular text which he chose as the

instrument of his instruction. It is undoubtedly a traditional, philosophical work, but with his genius he translated the wider, timeless truths in idiom and wealth of homely illustration thereby bringing from the heights of the Himalayas as it were, philosophy and religion to the hearts and homes of Maharashtra. It graphically conveyed the message of Sn K.r|na, a message of hope, of courage and duty to the bewildered people of Maharashtra in the days of their undoing at the hands of the invading Muslims. The context of the Gita, the sermon of Sri Kr^na to Arjuna and it so fulfilment in action—it all points out to one moral Dharma. Jnancsvara swept away much nonsense, stimulated clear thinking and more than anything else, filled the people with a prior faith and hope in redemption. “Where the Moon is, there is Moonlight, where fire exists, there is burning power, where Kr5na is, there is victory. Confidence in Him is the beginning of hhakti," JuanesvarJ is deemed to be of such universal significance and impart that the UNESCO has undertaken its translation into its six working lang¬ uages: English, French, Russian, Spanish, Arabic and Chinese. Apart from it, for further popular enlightenment JnaneWara also wrote his Amritarubhar or “Elixir of Experience” and abhaugs or devotional lyrics. Namadeva was a tailor and Jhaiiesvara’s contemporary but outlived him by over fifty years (d. 1350). He is regarded as the one who really set the sect upon proper footing and ushered in the Democracy of Devotion. “We have discovered the secret: let us propagate the Bhagavan’s Dharma, what use are pilgrimage while the mind still remains full of evil?” He asked. To propound the philosophy learnt from Jhanadeva, however, he himself undertook a long pilgrimage and went as far as Ghuman in Punjab where he is still venerated as a great saint in Sikh gurudwaras. Nowhere, perhaps, is illustrated the underlying unity of bliakti movement all over India as in this triumphal tour of Namadeva. In his abhangs which are on the lips of every Warkari he not only expressed his religious yearnings but also preached moral ideals illustrated with Puranic examples and used homely imagery for easy grasp. He penetrated to the essence through the externals. “A stone God and his mark devotee cannot satisfy each other. Such gods have been broken to pieces by the Turks, or have been flung into water,”

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Says Nama, **and yet they do not cry. Is it not amazing, he asks, that people should discard the animate and worship a dead stone? They kill a living ram to perform a Soma sacrifice, they paint a red stone with red lead and women and children fall prostrate before it. People worship a serpent made of clay but take up cudgels to kill a living one. All these are vain, declares Nama: the only pursuit of value is to utter the Name of God.” Can pure bhakti be empha¬ sised in more resounding terms? Jnanadeva and Namadeva formed a nucleus for this democracy of devotion. Others soon followed from all ranks and classes of people. Nivritti, SopanaDeva and Muktabai were Jnanadeva’s own two brothers and the sister respectively. To this group came to belong Gora the potter, Savata the gardener, Sena the barber, Narahari the goldsmith, Chokha the Mahar (untouchable), Joga Paramanand, an oilman, Janabai, the maidservant, Sakhubai a housewife, Kanhopatra, a prostitute. (Only Sena, Kanhopatra and Sakhubai are separated from Namadeva by about a century.) They also sang of the Lord in their own way in their abhah^s using similes and metaphors from their professions. Their value signi¬ ficance lie according to Rev. Macnicol, “in their affirmation of the claims of the human heart and the moral and religious sequences that follow from that affirmation. These are the elements in them that gave them power and enabled them to make an appeal so far reaching and so profound. It was a splendid effort of the Hindu soul to break the bondage under which it had lain so long. It at last / stirred in its long sleep, and turned its drowsy eyes towards the dawn.” From the middle of the fifteenth century we come across another cluster of saints: Bhanudasa, Janardana Svami and Ekanatha. They are distinguished not by their ecstatic devotion or extreme emotionalism but signify a balance between other-worldhness and the duties and obligations of this mundane life. Bhanudasa was born at Paithan on the Godavari about 1448. He is supposed to have brought back the image of Vitthala from Hampi (Vijaynagar) whither it had been removed for safety from Muslim hands He was the great grandfather of Ekanatha. His disciple was Janardana Svami guru of Ekanatha, and Qiladar of Daulatabad till in 1579. He devoted himself to the service of God even while he was performing his worldly duties a model for Ekanatha for combination of spiritual and worldly life. He was respected alike

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by Hindus and Muslims. Ekanatha (1533-99) all through his life was noted for his industry, regularity, patience and equanimity. His shaming an arrogant Muslim into repentance by sheer patience, his redemption of a prostitute, his kindly treatment of an untouch¬ able boy and a thirsty donkey and several other instances speak not only of his saintly qualities but of practical spiiituality. Ekanatha wrote works like CatiihHoki Bl'Utga\ata, Riikmim Svayamvara, Bhdvdrtha Rdmdyana in which he urged the establish¬ ment of true Ramarajya, and edited the text of Jnanesvari. But his reputation chiefly rests on his great commentary on the eleventh chapter of the Bhagavata {Ekandthl Bhdgavata), another gospel of the Warkaris after Jnanesvarl. It covers every conceivable subject connected with Vedantic philosophy with religion, with morality, but the predominant preaching is of bhakti as the main means of self-realization and Bhagavata Dharma as an embodiment of moral ideals and ethical values. The pundits of Varanasi were enraged at this what the vernacular they considered as vulgarization of a sacred Sanskrit text but soon realised their error and arranged the celebration of the completed manuscript by procession in a palan¬ quin. Ekanatha also wrote a great deal which might be described as folk literature spiritualising the traditions and aspects of practical professional life. Tukaram (1608-49), a contemporary of young Shivaji is at the summit and culmination of this long line of devotees traced above. A petty grocer of Dehu (a village not very far from Pune) his heart was not in business. Recent researches have revealed that there were arguments in the family as to who should carry on the family tradition of having at least one of its members fully devoted to religious life. Tukaram was the obvious choice, for God was Tukaram’s all in all. All earthly things, money and property, he counted as filth. God was his food and drink. The world was nothing to him. Moreover he is supposed to have been blessed by a guru, Baba Caitanya. His sharp-tongued wife had certainly no sympathy towards his spiritual yearnings. He himself by nature was most kind-hearted. Mahipati, the biographer of the saint-poets, described him as helping the sick, carrying the burdens of the weary, giving water to the thirsty and food to the hungry, going on errands for the fame. It was no wonder he failed in his business, and was carried away by his grand obsession and completely took to spiritual life and the ways of a mystic. Although presumably

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unlettered he was so full of love for God in a variety of forms that he burst into unexpected but inspired poetry called abhahgs. These abhahgs or the cries of a heart and soul which sensed Vidhala in everything around the animate as well as the inanimate world. Although a mystic poet at his best Tukaram can establish rapports with the common man to such an extent that till today he is the greatest in popular estimation, certainly the widest in the extent of his influence. The popularity of his abhahgs has continued undimi¬ nished till today, and many of them have been still in vogue and counted as proverbs. The reason could be that his spirituality and longing for Vitthala is deeply steeped with humanism. Pining for Vitthala he repeatedly stressed that he favours those who commisserate with the suffering humanity and try to alleviate the miseries of this world. Ill To those who want to connect the religious revival as demons¬ trated in these various sects and sub-sects with the rise of the political power of the Marathas, Ramadasa (1608-83), supplies the missing link, so to say. Unlike the saint-poets of the Warkari cult Ramadasa established his own Samartha Samparadaya and founded many mathas and temples for the propagation of his faith even outside Maharashtra. Moreover he had close relations with Shivaji himself though the exact nature of this relation is clouded with controversy. At the age of tewlve Narayan Suryaji Thosar fled from the marriage-altar and spent the next twelve years in sadhana. His Karundstakos during this period evoke his spiritual yearnings. He spent the next twelve years in pilgrimage all over India and even in Nepal. He was blessed by Lord Ramacandra Himself and thereafter became Samartha (powerful) Ramadasa.. He then took up the organisation of his disciples and his sect on firm foundations. He set up eleven temples of Hanuman to begin with, several temples of Lord Rama, visited Pandharpur too, and spent all the remaining years of his life in personally propagating the philosophy of his sect, travelling all over Maharashtra and beyond and establishing numerous mathas for the purpose. He propounded traditional Hindu philosophy in his own way in his famous composition Dasabodha sometime around ad 1655. Among Maharashtrian historians there has been never a ending

210

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debate over the exact nature of Ramadasa’s relationship with Shivaji. At the beginning of this century archivist historian Rajwade propounded the view that Ramadasa was Rashtraguru acti¬ vely guiding Shivaji in his political career. Prof. N.R. Pathak spent almost a lifetime declaring time and again that Ramadasa’s work and influence were primarily religious and only secondarily poli¬ tical. Such is the opinion of the English biographers of Ramadasa, Rev. Deming and Rev. Abbot. Dr. A.G. Pawar has gone to the other extreme and regards Ramadasa as no better than another spiritual guru of Shivaji, like Baba Yakut or Mauni Baba. The truth lies somewhere in between these extremes. Both Shivaji and Ramadasa were the creators as well as the participators in the new life that was surging through Maharashtra during the seventeenth century. That they were contemporaries working for a common cause is undeniable. The controversy regarding the personal con¬ tacts between Shivaji and Ramadasa is not of secondary importance as stated by Prof. S.R. Sharma but of primary significance inasmuch as on it depends the issue of Ramadasa’s active guidance to Shivaji in his political affairs. The earliest date assigned to their first meeting is 1649. But this has been derived from internal evidence while if archival evidence is to be believed it could not be earlier than 1672 by which time Shivaji had already attained a great deal of success in his life’s mission of creating an indepen¬ dent State of the Marathas. A dispassionate perusal of the Ddsahodha indicates clearly that it is neither a political testament nor a philosophy of history but a work of metaphysics combined with religious instruction. Although in Ramadasa’s life and psalmody Rama and Hanuman are of great importance they were not his exclusive deities. Tulja Bhavani was of equal importance. To her he prayed, “I ask Thee of only one thing my mother: Promote the cause of the king in our very life time. I have heard of Thy exploits in the past, but show Thy power to day.” There are several other hymns and dratis composed by him in praise of other gods and goddesses. His prayer to Tulja Bhavani cited above, his correspondence with Shivaji (collected after 1672), his detailed advice to Sambhaji on his accession to follow his father Shivaji’s way, his exhortations on the duties of the king and the soldiers, his outbursts on the politi¬ cal degradation and social perversions of his period, his cries of pure joy in the kingdom of bliss {unandvati hhuvati) brought about

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in Maharashtra by Shivaji—all these and many other utterances of his have misled many historians to looking upon Ramadasa as one politically oriented. But there is no evidence whatsoever to suggest that he ever dabbled in political affairs of his time. In his works he has used the term Rajkaran more to connote cleverness or alertness, circumspection in action rather than politics. His Maharashtra Dharma is not very different from Hindu religion as practised elsewhere. At the same time Ramadasa was undoubtedly far more aware than the Warkaris, of the religious anarchy, social degrada¬ tion and political situation of his time and yearned for all-round emancipation. It cannot be denied that activism characterised his teachings, that he possessed practical wisdom and was endowed with an intellectual pragmatism which he brought to bear upon spiritual life as well. The Warkari Sampradaya evolved of its own whereas Ramadasa made positive attempts to organise his sect. His instructions to his mahants to gather and win over religious assem¬ blies are so practical and detailed that they can be applied to workers in the political field as well and are hence liable to mis¬ construction. Ramadasa more than any other saint of medieval Maharashtra endeavoured to provide a sound organisational foundation for the religious life of the people. He drew the people’s minds to the performances and duties and stressed all-round deve¬ lopment of human personality. His religious zeal and fervour recall to our mind those of Swami Vivekananda in modern times (while the Warkaris remind us of Lord Gaurahga Prabhu). As it happened Ramadasa’s disciples and followers, be it Dinkar Gosavi, Giridhar Swami, Atmarambuwa Ekkelihalikar or the Das Panchayatan itself, always strictly emphasized Ramadasa’s religious preachings in the traditional manner. Prof. S.M. Mate has dubbed it as Ramadasa’s defeat at his disciples hands. It is noteworthy that the fervour of Ramadasa attracted saint-poets of other sects. Besides Ramadasa Jayaramaswami Vadgaonkar, Rahganathaswami Nigalikar, Anandamurti Brahmanalkar and Keshavswami Bhaganagarkar are the other four saints of the Daspanchayatan (quintet of das). Of these the last was a Nathpanthi and the two before him belong¬ ed to the Ananda Sampradaya mentioned earlier. While these and other followers of Ramadasa continued to interpret Ramadasa as yet another other-worldly saint-poet, Ramadasa’s nineteenth and early twelfth centuries admirers took him up as an idol for nation¬ alistic worship. Many of Tilak’s

followers

drew

their

spiritual

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sustenance from Ramadasa as they understood him. The apprecia¬ tive articles written by a (later) ardent devotee of bhakti cult like L.R. Pangarkar (twentieth century biographer of saints and histori¬ an of Marathi literature) were considered so seditious as to be confiscated in 1908! S.S. Dev felt so inspired by Ramadasa that he devoted his entire life to the collection and publication of every¬ thing relating to this saint, mostly at his expense. All that we know of Ramadasa and his sect today is mostly due to Dev’s life mission. IV There is undoubted social significance attached to the work of the various religious sects which have been briefly described above. The late Justice M.G. Ranade was practically the first historian of the Marathas to sum it up in a very eloquent fashion. “The religious movement,” says Ranade, “which, commencing with Jnanadeva who lived in the fifteenth century {sic), can be traced to the end of the last century (eighteenth century) as a steady growth in spiritual values. It gave us a literature of considerable value in the varnacular language of the country. It modified the strictness of the old spirit of caste exclusiveness. It raised the sudra classes to a position of spiritual power and social importance, almost equal to that of the Brahmanas. It gave sanctity to the family relations, and raised the status of woman. It made the nation more humane, at the same time more prone to hold together by mutual toleration. It suggested and partly carried out a plan of reconciliation with the Mohamme¬ dans. It subordinated the importance of rites and ceremonies, and of pilgrimages and fasts, and of learning and contemplation, to the higher excellence of worship by means of love and faith. It checked the excesses of polytheism. It tended in all these ways to raise the nation generally to a higher level of capacity both of thought and action, and prepared it in a way no other nation in India was pre¬ pared to take the lead in re-establishing a united native power in the place of foreign domination. These appear to us to be the principal features of the religion of Maharashtra, which Sant Ramadasa had in view when he advised Shivaji’s son to follow in his father’s footsteps and propagate his faith, at once tolerant and catholic, deeply spiritual and yet not iconoclastic.” A closer analysis of the religious revival in Maharashtra indicates

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that Ranade certainly has overestimated its significance, mainly because he has equated preaching with practice and seems to believe that what was preached was achieved. Preaching alone can rarely bring about any great transformation on a large scale. Nevertheless the saint-poets in their own way did elevate the people to a higher plane of existence. In medieval Maharashtra religion and whatever went in its name exercised far greater influ¬ ence on the minds of the people than any doing of the political rulers, be they Hindu or Muslim. The saint-poets tended to purify, simplify and revitalise Hindu religion and to that extent the religi¬ ous movements, sects and sub-sects on the whole had a beneficial impact upon society. First of all the domination of the Brahmanas in the spiritual sphere was broken down by the incessant preachings of the saintpoets. They asserted the dignity of the human soul which is quite independent of the accident of its birth. They repeatedly pointed out that anyone could attain salvation by faith and love despite one’s birth in an humble caste or class. The saints fostered a democratic spirit by emphasizing the equality of all men and women in the eyes of God. Particularly in the Warkari movement caste differences were forgotten in the annual pilgrimages to Pandharpur and the mixed religious gatherings on the way and on the banks of the Chandrabhaga (or the Bhima). They certainly ushered in the democracy of devotion. The saint-poets helped the common man in another way. They pointed out that it was not necessary to abandon material life for the sake of salvation. Samnyasa or retiring to the forest was not a prerequisite for spiritual attainments. Such bliss was possible in spite of one’s being burdened with the cares of tending and raising a family provided one had enough faith and devotional love for God. Doing one’s duty, carrying on one’s hereditary profession in the right spirit, attending to the obligations of a worldly life, were not incompatible with spiritual life and attainments. It has to be noted that while Vedas had been made inaccessible to woman by Manu and thus traditional Vedic religion denied any hope to women as a class the saint-poets assured all classes including women spiritual progress if they followed the path of devotion {bhakti). Women are to be found in promising positions in all newly arisen sects. The saint-poets strongly condemned the crude worship of abo i-

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ginal gods and village goddesses and the frightful rites and sacrifices carried on in the name of worship of some primitive divinity. They denounced in no uncertain terms the worship of stocks and stones and the offerings to a merciful when the image did not symbolise the Supreme Being. At the same time they were practical enough to appreciate that an average man finds the worship of the formless Absolute very difficult. Yet the saints of Maharashtra always regarded image worship as purely ancillary to real faith and devo¬ tion. Also if we find a great deal of religious toleration in medieval Maharashtrian society it can be easily attributed to the preaching of the saint-poets. They were never too strong in condemning sects other than their own. They did not consume those who abandoned their own sects and embraced other ways. On the other hand there was a great deal of mutual exchange —give-and-take. As we have noticed there was an absolutely free intercourse among various sects. The sectarian differences were never carried to the extreme as in South India. Religious persecution of one sect by another was unheard of. No instances have come to light of violent dis¬ turbance, large-scale migrations or desertion of villages on account of such persecution. Politically speaking the creation of a Maratha nation was to an extent made possible by the saint-poets deliberately fostered the growth and development of Marathi language and literature. Langu¬ age is one of the potent forces that moulds men into a nationality. By choosing the language of the people for religious instruction the saint-poets created a common bond and common heritage which could be utilised by Shivaji later on. Divided as the medieval Maharashtrian society was by castes and subcastes, sects and sub¬ sects, each of which recommended its own distinctive way of life, nothing could be more effective in uniting it than a common langu¬ age. In those days of rudimentary means of communications and absence of mechanical mass media klrtans and bhajans were the main instruments for bringing large bodies of men together. This religious fraternity singing devotional songs and listening to dis¬ courses in their own tongue, created ties that went far beyond the purely spiritual. All the saint-poets were men of God and there was no hypocrisy about them. Their sincerity and honesty of purpose are transparent in their verses. They practised what they preached. They led ex¬ emplary lives which beneficially influenced large number of men

Medieval Maharashtra and Muslim Saint-Poets

215

and women in later generations. Whatever the actual words of their poetic sermons and the differences in interpreting the God and the world there was always a strong undercurrent of high moral values, lofty ethical norms, noble sentiments and dignified approach. It appears in their preaching. How could the society remain unaffected albeit in a limited way? By intentionally choosing to preach and write in the language of the people, by giving poetic expression to their deep religious experiences and emotions and also by making a seminal contribution to the growth of Marathi they forged the common bond of language which is one of the most powerful factors in the creation of a sense of nationality. If Jnanadeva’s Bhdvdrtha-Dipikd and Ekanatha’s Bhdgavata are unrivalled classics of popular enlightenment, the ahlwhga gdthds (collections) of Namadeva and Tukaram are unique repositories of the Quintes¬ sence of true religion combined with practical wisdom for the common man. All the saint-poets of medieval Maharashtra toge¬ ther created a cultural heritage which Shivaji sought to defend and propagate through political independence. V While attaching little importance generally to the religious move¬ ments and sects in Maharashtra. V.K. Rajwade, however, agree with many others that these succeeded in halting the spread of Islam on a large scale. The scale of Islamic invasion of Maharash¬ tra itself has to be measured. Sufi proselytizers from t .e North had descended into the Deccan even before the Khalji invasion and we have reason to believe that Alaud-din Khalji s way was paved with their efforts. Momin Arif (Devagin), Jalalud- in Gauj Khan Baba Shafud-din and Shamsuddm (Hyderabad), Hyat Qalandar (Mangial Pir) Hisamud-din (Gulbarga), Sheikh Sahid (Talikot), Shaikh Sarmart (Sagar-Shahapur), Shaha Quta Rahman (Ellichpur), were active during the days of the Yadava rulers themselves. But they become much more agressive when the Hindus were politically subjugated and the Bahamnis replaced the Yadavas. They had close connections with the court, dabbled in royal politics, many of them had acquired weak too and were politically supported in their activities. The concept o the Sufi as the other-worldly mystic in Islam is erroneous. e celebrated Sufi Saint Hazrat Nizamud-din of Delhi sent seven

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hundred Sufi activists to the Deccan first under the leadership of Shaikh Munajud-din in ad 1300. After his death in 1309 another batch of seven hundred was sent under his brother Burhanud-din Garib Shah. Daulatabad became their headquarters for the spread of Islam in Maharashtra. With political support they desecrated temples, destroyed shrines and monasteries, and converted with violence Hindus into Muslims and temples into mosques. At the same time it must not be supposed that it was nothing but religious oppression throughout. Muslim rule in this part of India tended to be more tolerant than elsewhere. That a saintly person like Janardanasvami, guru of Ekanatha, was not only retained as the commander of the Daulatabad fort by the Bahamanis but was also respected by them for his spiritual status may, perhaps be regarded as indicative of their religious policy in general, though this largely depended on the individual ruler. It is said that instead of Friday (which is holy to the Muslims) Thursday was declared a public holiday at Daulatabad since it was the day of Dattatreya, Janardanasvami’s god. On the other hand we have the story of his disciple Ekanatha on whom a Muslim spat every time he return¬ ed from a bath in the Godavari. Ekanatha ultimately put him to shame by his saintly patience, but the Muslims’ action shows how confident their community felt of being backed by the ruling power even in their misconduct. Ekanatha’s poem entitled “Hindu-Turuk Sarnvad” (dialogue between a Hindu and a Muslim) in which each criticises the religion of the other but finally embraces the other, realizing that they are looked upon alike by God is more indica¬ tive of the saint’s own attitude than of the actual state of relations between the two communities. It cannot be denied, however, that many Hindus were attracted by the miracle-making powers and siddhis which some of the Sufis were presumed to have acquired. Sant Ekanatha makes a reference to Daval Malik, one such saint. In the fifteenth century this disci¬ ple of Hazrat Shah Alam earned a great reputation for his curative powers for not only human beings but even animals. He was said to have received these powers through Hazrat Shah Alam. Conse¬ quently he excercised enormous influence over the Hindus. Nearly 360 of his chitlas (or enshrined relics) were thronged more by the Hindus than the Muslims. Even Brahmanas took to worshipping Daval Malik. And even today there are certain Brahmana families bearing the surname Davalbhaktas. This was not confined only to the

Medieval Maharashtra and Muslim Saint-Poets

111

communers. For example Malaji Bhosle, Shivaji’s grandfather was believed to have begot two sons through the blessings of Shah Sharif of Ahmadnagar. Hence he named them Shahaji and Sharifji and this has been recorded in the earliest biography of Shivaji (Sabhasad, ad 1696). Sant Ekanatha makes a reference that many Hindus embraced Islam of their own free will, obviously with an intention to carry favour with the ruling powers. What was the attitude of the saint-poets to the desecration of the Hindu religion and culture by the Muslims? Namadeva utilised it as an instance to moralise against meaningless image worship. Ekanatha derided the Daval Malik devotees who becameonce a year and ate the leavings of Turks, while Ramadasa, true to his nature, cried out in anguish and urged protection. It would not be wrong to assume that the saint-poets with their repeated preaching of what according to them was true religion and their exhortations or ethical behaviour and the path of virtue could check such selfseeking Hindus as embraced Islam for material benefits. The Muslim kings also benefited from the alleged curative powers of Hindu saints as noticed in respect of Nrsimha Sarasvati earlier. Conversion was a one-way traffic. This was so because of the rigidity and inflexibility of doctrinaire of Hinduism. To be a Hindu one had to be born in that religion, a matter of pure chance and there was no other way to become a Hindu. Of course Hinduism has never been a proselytizing religion either. Consequently Hindu¬ ism could not claim and lost born in other faiths but following a Hindu way of life because of this inflexible approach. Despite this handicap the greatest achievement of the Marathi saint-poets vis-a-vis Islam was not so much curbing its growth as in excercising their influence over those born into Islam in such a way that they came to adopt Hindu way of life and thinking and them¬ selves began to preach in terms of Hindu philosophy. We recount below briefly the lives and works of such Muslim Marathi saintpoets. VI Shaikh Muhammad Shrigondekar (1570-1660) This author of the volumnious work Yogasahgrdm and other spiritual excercises can be regarded as the most prominent and illustrative among the Muslim Marathi saint-poets. He has been

218

Narayan H. Kulkarnee

generally regarded as the Marathi reincarnation of Sant Kabir. The eighteenth century prolific pundit poet Moropanth in his poem, Saumani Mala reverentially refers to him as a great devotee. From his own poetry we learn that his father was Syed Raja Mahammad and mother was called Phulai a Hindu sounding name. Raja Mohammad was (jiladar of Dharur. The more celebrated Sant Chand Bodhle was Raja Mahammad’s disciple to whom he entrusted the religious education of his son. Shaikh Muhammad appears to have studied Jndnrsvarl in particular as its influence can be seen in Yogasaugrdtn. Raja Mahammad belonged to the Qadiri section of the Sufis and so Sheikh Muhmmad was also a Qadiri Sufi by birth. Chand Bodhle, Sheikh Muhammad’s guru was no intolerant sectarian. He has been regarded as the quarter of Lord Dattatreya himself. Chand Bodhle taught his disciple the fundamental unity between Islam and Hinduism. Chatrapati Shivaji s grandfather Malaji Bhosle was also a liberal-minded Hindu. We have seen earlier how he worshipped Shah Sharif of Ahmednagar. He became a disciple of Sheikh Muhammad to whom he granted the village of Shrigonde (district Nagor) under his jurisdiction around ad 1595, where he spent the rest of his life preaching what his guru had taught him, castigating ritualistic religion and cruel social practices. He was not dismayed by the destruction of Pandharpur for he knew that God did not reside in stone images which could be broken. Sheikh Muhammad was caught in a peculiar dilemma. The fanatics among his co-religionists castigated him as a kafir whereas the Hindus thought that his condemnation of the prevailing religious practices originated from the fact of his being a Muslim. But he was convinced that spiritual knowledge and enlightenment had no caste, creed or religion. Shaikh Muhammad has stated that he began to be listened to with respect, albeit gradually, by Sudras and Brahmanas alike. Jayarama Swami Vadgaonkar, of the Samartha sect became his close friend. He was bitten by the snake thrice, was severely condemned and abused by his evil-minded enemies but he survived it all to attain the fame of a great Muslim saint and died at the ripe old age of ninety. His magnum opus Yoga Sangram is dated ad 1645. Despite all his Hindu influences and preachings he appears to have died a Muslim, for his tomb is a dargali. Obviously his contrives did not ostracise him altogether. He was a family man and according to Siraj-i-Qadini his son and successors continued in the Qadiri sect. His son

Medieval Maharashtra and Muslim Saint-Poets

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Davalji and grandson Hakimji have composed dratfs in his praise^ Apart from his own descendants he attracted Hindu disciples from various classes such as Mudha Pangul (a caste which sings typical compositions). Dayaldas Devang (Kannada—weaver), Raghunath Yogi, etc. who have written about him. Even Sant Ramadasa has composed an drati on him. Shaikh Muhammad wrote mainly in Marathi but his compositions in Hindi, Urdu and Persian are also available though proportionately much less. The theme of Yoga-Sahgram is the congress of the Ego and Pride by the Soul., Pavanavijaya, Nishkalanka Prahodha are his lesser known works. In his writings he has attacked polytheism, the silly and cruel vows such as hook swinging etc., animal scarifice, prostitution by muralis, the iniquities of the Hindu caste system, etc. According to him all those born from the womb of the mother are Muslims and there¬ fore there are no kafirs. When he was dismayed by fanaticism he exclaimed, ‘Ignorance is Muslim, Knowledge is Brahmin. He urges, ‘Brothers, open your eyes, and see for yourselves. The Muslims call Sacha Pir who is the same as the Complete Guru of the Marathas. He attacks superstitions, perverted religious practices, the hypocrisies, the inadequacies. In all this he is no less than a Warkari saint-poet. He sings in praise of Lord Vitthala and uses the Hindu concept that Vitthala has placed his hands on his waist to indicate that the material world is only waistdeep and that we can keep our heads over it. His style is influenced by Jhdnesvari and he often refers to Sant Ek^nath’s Bhdgavata. Such a personality appears to have been accepted by his community at last; for he rests eternally in a dargah and is venerated by Hindus and Muslims alike. Shah Muntoji Bahamani (1575-1650)

Legend has it that he was born in one of the branches of the royal family of the Bahamanis of Bidar. It is difficult to determine his age but Dr. Dhere surmises it as given above from internal evidence. If this is correct then he could not have been born in the ruling family as the Bahamani rule had come to an end by. ad 1520. There is a traditional story about his spiritual awakening. He with his consort was sitting by the window of his mansion eating plaintains and throwing down the peels. There were strict orders to the guards not to disturb their privacy. Neverthelees a beggar was found entering the premises and licking the peels.

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Muntoji asked the'guards to punish the beggar. So he was thrashed by them but he only laughed. So Muntoji stopped the guards whereupon the beggar began to cry. Asked to explain, the beggar said that if for eating only the peels he was so severely punished, he wondered what dire consequences awaited Muntoji who ate the whole plantains. If for entering the premises he was thrashed what would happen to Muntoji who slept there every day? These words opened the eyes of Muntoji and much in the manner of Lord Buddha he left the mansion and went to Pandhapur in quest of peace of mind and spiritual enlightenment. There he became a disciple of Sahajanand Svami of Kalyani belonging to Ananda Sampradaya. His guru gave him a copy of Mukundraja’s Viveka Sindhu (a favourite of the Ananda sect), named him anew as Mrityunjaya also with the sectarian name Dhansagaranand and even attempted to convert him to formal Brahmanism. But his guru's efforts were thwarted by the Brahmanas. Doctrinaire Brah¬ manism was still more powerful than any of the newly founded sects. After his guru's samadhi he shifted to Narayanpur nearby. Kalyani was the centre of Liiigayata sect and many Lihgayatas were influenced by Mrityunjaya’s teachings and become his disci¬ ples. Mahipati, the author of Bhakta Vijaya (a collection of biographical sketches of saints and devotees) gives the story of two dogs of Mrityunjaya (Vedanta and Siddhanta by name) awakening 10,000 lifigas and returning them to the weavers only after being importuned. The story demonstrates mutual give-and-take among the various Hindu sects. The Lihgayats began to call Mrityunjaya as Dhansagar Ayya, the Kannada, variation of his sectarian name. But despite Mrityunjaya’s excursions into Hinduism and adopting a Hindu way of life his tomb at Narayanpur is known as the dargah of Murtaja Qadiri as he originally belonged to the Qadiri sect of the Sufis. The Hindus are prominent only at the annual celebra¬ tions at the dargah. The nearby Siva temple is managed by the Hindus while the dargah precincts are full of Hindu relics. In his own composition Mrityunjaya has been greatly influenced by Viveka Sindhu, whose style and idiom he adopts. The manner in which he extols the greatness of his guru is typically Hindu. He has sung of Lord Kr§na and assures his readers that he has united the Hindus and Muslims through his work Paneikaran. The latter explains that there is no basic difference in Hindu and Islamic philosophy and thought and that there is much common ground in Sufi prea-

Medieval Maharashtra and Muslim Saint-Poets

221

chingand Hindu thinking. One Hindu appears to have been his favourite disciple as evinced from available compositions of Madhayya. SidhaSanket Prabandha is Mrityunjaya’s largest work (9 chapters in 2000 verses). It is in the nature of spiritual guidance given by Rama to Sita as described in Padma Parana. In Prakdia DIpa Mrtynejay endeavours to give the essence of Upanisads, Vedas and Sastras. In Pancikaran the author has given the Persian glossary for Hindu spiritual terminology in Sanskrit, (e.g. Sthula Deha-Wajibul Wajud etc.) Muntoji’s works are entirely religious and spiritual in nature, the approach being that of traditional Hindu philosophy, but more in the nature of Viveka Sindhu. It is not influenced by Jhdnesvari or the Warkari s abhan^sHusain Ambar Khan {AD 1602-?)

Ambar Khan’s main claim to fame is his Marathi rendering of the Bhagavad-Gitd. Hardly any biographical details are available about his spiritual or material life. Dr Dhere argues that Ambar Khan’s father Yakut might have served in the Nizamshahi army and helped in Shahaji’s efforts (which proved fruitless in the end) in restoring the Nizamshahi. He appears to have migrated to the south presumably with Shahaji. Certain it is that his son Husain was born in ad 1602, much before this migration according to Vaidyanathan, a writer from Thanjavur and a great admirer of Husain Ambar(so much so that he regards him as an incarnation of the Almighty in this Kali yuga). Husain completed the Marathi rendering of the Sanskrit G/ta in 1652. A copy was made within one year at Gingee (now available in Saraswati Mahal Library at Thanjavur) and therefore may be presumed to have been written in that region. The liberal, religious atmosphere at Daulatabad,, however, might have influenced Husain Ambar a great deal. He begins by offering his worship to Lord Ganesa who overcomes all obLcles, particularly the greatest obstacle of differences every¬ where Hussain’s work is practically a literal rendering of the Gita with no original comments of any kind. Not everyone would appreciate his astounding claim, quite unlike any other saint-poet, that he is the ‘crowning jewel of spiritual cognosced. In fact unless more works of Husain became available it would be difficult to determine his position among the saint-poets.

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-Shaikh Sultan (ad 1705-68)

Like Wadwal Siddha Nagnath, Gopalnath was a spiritual leader of the eighteenth century who had among his disciples men and women, the upper caste ones as well as the lower caste people kirtankars as well as shahirs, Hindus as well as Muslims. Gopal¬ nath had migrated from Daulatabad to Tripuri, a village twelve km off Satara, where he entered his final samddhi. It is at Tripuri that he found a Muslim disciple, viz.. Shaikh Sultan. Unlike some other Muslim saint poets, Shaikh Sultan was not bitten by the spiritual bug. On the other hand he was a shahir (i.e. a poet who sings typical lavani compositions, composing them on the spot and entering into spiritual controversies in verse form.) He belonged to Kaarve near Karhad (also in Satara district) and it is said that he enjoyed the patronage of Shahu Chhatrapati the first. After ■enjoying royal patronage and receiving robes of honour etc., he was passing by the matha of Gopalnath. The latter called him and requested him to sing his compositions. When be began to sing Gopalnath asked him the meaning. Shaikh Sultan was dismayed, for, he could not explain. Gopalnath asked him to give up shahiri singing and take to kirtan (religious discourses). Just as Shaikh Sultan’s pride was broken and he was converted to spiritualism by Gopalnath, this great siddha also humbled another arrogant dis¬ ciple Madhavnath who had begun to pride himself over his religi¬ ous discourses. He told him, “I will make a Muslim far superior to you.” The Muslim was Shaikh Sultan whose potentialities had already been realised by Gopalnath. Tradition has it that Gopal¬ nath gave his hold-eaten faod to Shaikh Sultan and thus trans¬ mitted his powers. Shaikh Sultan became a well-known religious preacher. The tradition is alive till today; at the death anniversary •celebrations of Gopalnath the honour of playing the vhia is a Muslim’s. Some other disciples of Gopalnath built a residence for Shaikh Sultan at Tripuri (the relics of which can be still seen) where he spent the rest of his life serving his guru and performing religious discourses {kJrtans). Shaikh Daji, younger brother of Shaikh Sultan also became Gopalnath’s disciple and shared his elder brother’s life at Tripuri. Some orthodox Hindus, however, did not relish that a Muslim should give Hindu religious discourses and complained to the Peshwa (either Nana Saheb or Madhavrao I). The Peshwa invited Shaikh Sultan to Pune for a discourse and was so pleased with it that he gave him a garden at Munjeri (near

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Swar Gate in Pune) as a present (the matha erected there still exists). Shaikh Sultan used to go to Mahuli every day for his bath in the sacred river Krishna. In old age he could not perform this journey end so his guru told him to dig a well in his residence where the Krishna river would present herself. So he did and so did the Krishna. Another version has it that the dying Shaikh wanted to have his samddhi built on the banks of the Krishna. A sceptic challenged him to bring the Krishna herself to his residence and he did so by digging a well which is flooded with mud-soaked water in the monsoon as the Krishna is. Sehaikh Sultan’s samddhi is at his Tripuri residence, Vitthalnath, a nephew of Gopalnath, has sung his praise as the guru's unequalled disciple. Shaikh Sultan’s works have got mixed up with those of his brother (Shaikh Dsaji) who was a first class poet and religious preacher himself and has used the brother’s name instead of his own in his compositions. The Shaikh’s own compositions include Puranic stories of Sati Anasuya, the birth of Lord Ganesa, the birth of Hanuman, the story of Mahasivaratri etc. Yet another poem tells the story of a prostitute and her two lovers who all attained spiritual salvation when they gave up their wicked ways. A couple of his dratfs are entirely spiritual metaphors while a few of his Hindi compositions express the mystic experiences in various colours. The Peshwa present to him is an example of the liberal, religious policy of the Marathas, which extended patronage to the deserving irrespective of caste, creed or faith. We may also venture to suggest that, perhaps, because of the Peshwa rule, the Muslims hesitated to appropriate Shaikh Sultan as belonging to their faith. Shah Muni (c. 1756-1807)

His family for four generations had been following liberal, Hindu traditions despite being Muslim originally. His great-grandfather Shanabawa, born at Allahabad, was a devotee of Siva. He knew Persian, but after shifting to Ujjain, sometime after 1728 when Malwa came under the influence and eventual rule of the Marathas, he appears to have picked up Marathi as well. At Ujjain was born to him a son whom he named as Janoji. Though Ujjain is a holy place for the Saivites, Janoji was a devotee of Vi5nu. His son Mansing was born at Siddhatek (Nagar district, Maharashtra) and was appropriately a worshipper of Ganesa, Siddhatek is one of the eight shrines of Ganesa (Asta-Vinayaka) Shah Muni himself was

224

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born at Pedgaon (Nagar district), just twelve miles off saint-poet Shaikh Muhammad’s Shrigonda. He informs us that one Munindra Swami a sannydsi belonging to Datta Sampradaya blessed him at Varanasi around 1779. Shah Muni’s celebrated work Siddhdnta Bodha shows the devout regard

with which he looked upon his

guru. Only merit earned in previous birth made him so fortunate

as to have such a Master, a typically Hindu concept. Shah Muni does not appear to have settled down at any particular place. His Siddhdnta Bodha was composed at Pathari Manolan (Satara district) in ad 1794 while he died at Shahagad around 1807. Shah Muni’s tomb is maintained by five Muslim families who are vegetarians, teetotellers, worship Kr§na and regard Mahanubhavas as their intimates. The other Muslims in the township do not partici¬ pate in the death anniversary celebrations. Since Siddhdnta Bodha has a place of honour among the Mahanubhavas who otherwise regard works composed by other sects as heretical, Shah Muni also must be looked upon as a Mahanubhava. Siddhdnta Bodha itself bears testimony to it as it contains concepts such as inferiority of the Brahma-Visnu-Mahesa trinity vis-a-vis the Almighty. Kr§na and Datta as deities for worship but not incarnations of Visnu, the Pancakrsnas, the absolute supremacy of Chakradhar and so on. Strangely enough towards the end of his work Shah Muni adopts advaita philosophy. The Warkari influence is evident in his admira¬ tion and praise for Pandharpur and obeisance to the Warkari saints whom the Mahanubhavas have always ignored. This syncretical approach has led to the popularity of Siddhdnta-Bodha among all classes. The work is slightly larger than Jnlnesvari and contains a mixture of Mahanubhava teachings, advaita philosophy and Puranic stories in lyrical language. Shah Muni holds Kabir in high esteem. He does not believe in the caste system or its hierarchy. He explains away the Hindu-Muslim hostility with the help of imaginary tales. He is, however, dismayed by such hostility and at one place expresses his sorrow for being born in a community which condemned Hinduism, derided Hindu scriptures, desecrated temples, took delight in killing cows on Hindu festive days and betrayed the true God thereby. He is as much aware of the funda¬ mental similarities as of some basic differences between the two religions. Shah Muni’s approach, philosophy and life is one of the shining examples of liberal Catholicism in eighteenth century Maharashtra.

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Alam Khan {period unknown) The exact period of this saint-poet is neither known for certain nor can it be surmised from any internal evidence. From the stories and legends that have grown round his personality all that can be said about it is that he was definitely one belonging to the middle ages. Alam Khan belonged to a place called Mahapur beyond the Vindhyas, perhaps in the present-day Madhya Pradesh. The youngest among four brothers he was everybody’s favourite. While playing bows and arrows he accidentally hit the earthen pot being carried by his sister-in-law. He was frightened at; the same time the incident also triggered off his propensities for spiritualism. Neither the reassurances of his sister-in-law nor the importunities of his brothers who urged that a spiritual life can be led at home as well would satisfy him. He left his home town and migrated to the forest near Kalyani. Ajagirdar of Kalyani named Ram had come hunting in that forest but was surrounded by his enemies and defeated. Alam Khan could not stand it. He used his bows and arrows to great effect and rescued Ram. A grateful Ram offered him a position in his court. Alam Khan initially declined but ulti¬ mately agreed to accompany Ram to Kalyani and to stay there for a while. During his stay there, finding a disciple full of potentia¬ lities, Waduml Siddha Nagnath (founder of Nagesa Sampradaya) gave him darsan. Alam went inside to bring a gift for his guru in token of his complete submission. Meanwhile the guru disappeared and the guards told him that none had come or gone. Realising the true nature of this miraculous appearance of his guru he went to Wodwal, his headquarters. While spending a night at the temple in that township he discovered that his main horse had disappeared. Regarding this as the guru's order to give up worldly life Alam returned to Ram Jagirdar all that he had given him. Pleased with this and Alam Khan’s sddhand the guru ordered him to proceed to Jajar Mugli (in Osmanabad district bordering Karnataka and important for Nagesa Sampradaya). At Jajar Mugli his fame as a divine spread wide but the Qadiris of the Sufi sect who had been proselytising in the region did not like that their coreligionist should be the disciple of a Hindu saint and sing his songs. They severely criticised him whereupon Alam Khan told them that the pride in one’s body should be shackled by one’s conscience. To demonstrate, he heated some iron fetters and asked his critics to wear them. His critics turned round and challenged Alam to put

Narayan H. Kulkarnee

226 them on. Alam Khan did so without any injury. This fire ordeal rebuffed the pir-i-dastagirs among the Sufis. wanted no more of such incidents. He requested the villagers of Jagir Mugh for a piece of land for his burial. The villagers delayed matters for they did not want to be separated from such a yogz so soon. Ultimately Alam Khan went to nearby Karale Osmanabad district) and put an end to his life Meanwhi e the Mugli villagers were regretting that the saint had deserted them They found snakes emerging in their village everywhere whereupon they prayed to the saint. A snake emerged from the Hanuman temple and vanished at the place where Alam Khan used to sit They built there yet another token tomb. It would be no wonder if all these miraculous happenings gained Alam Khan quite a few disciples, but no names have come down to us. About fifteen of his compositions have survived and are available. In them he traces his spiritual progress and the steps towards self-realisation. He has composed an drati in praise of his guru Nagnath. The ^ live in this material world but are not of it are the objects of Ins immense admiration. His samddlii has not been appropriated by the Muslims be converted into a dargah. Latif Shah {16th Century)

He is yet another saint-poet mentioned as a great devotee by poet Moropant in his Sanmani Mala. Moropant says that Latif was admired by Saint Tukaram himself. Latif himself refers to Kabir and Mirabai in one of his compositions. It may be, there¬ fore, inferred that he was a sixteenth century saint-poet. But no biographical details save the miracle described by poet Mahipati in his Bhaktavijaya are available so far. Although a born Muslim, Latif Shah was a devout Vai§nava. He worshipped Lord Rama, listened to the discourses on Gitd and Bhdgavata, offered daily worship and showed great love for kirtans. His coreligionists com¬ plained of this heretical conduct to the Muslim king who ordered that his dsrama be destroyed. But such was the spiritual power of Latif that those who came to destroy remained to pray. So the king himself set out to punish Latif and came to his dsrama. He noticed the clean, pleasant compound, the well-kept and well-swept mud flooring, fragrant flowers, a tulsi plant, the lime washed walls decorated with coloured illustrations of Hindu deities. An appreci¬ ative audience including those sent by the king was listening to

Medieval Maharashtra and Muslim Saint-Poets

227

Latif Shah’s recital of Bhdgavata. The furious king thundered at Latif: why is your Kr§na not eating the pan offered by Radha in this illustrations? Thereupon Latif prayed to the Lord to accept it and He did. The king became repentant and humbled. Such is the miracle reported by the eighteenth century poet Mahipati who has specialised in recounting in graphic detail the miracles of the saints and the devotees of an earlier period in his Bhakta-vijaya. Of Latif’s own compositions only three Hindi and one Marathi poem have been discovered so far. In a Hindi poem Latif mentions the previous devotees of Lord Rama and says that he too is joining them in his own small way. Rama and Kr§na are the deities he worships. He lashes out at hypocrisy and ritualistic religion. His sole surviving Marathi poem is a miltonic metaphor on objects of worship. Latif Shah’s dargah is at Mangalwedhe (in Solapur district), but his Muslim devotees have completely appropriated him. Other Saint-Poets There are quite a few Muslim saint-poets whose biographical details are lacking but whose poetry survives in lesser or greater bulk to speak for them. In some cases only the names have come down to us. Of them Bajid Pathan has been mentioned by poet Moropant in his Sanmani Mala, by poet Uddhav Chidghana and also by poet Mahipati (in his Bhakialildmrta) who mentions some details. According to Mahipati, Bajid was a well-to-do Adilshahi officer with many sons, daughters and relatives. He was rich and successful. Once while returning home from a campaign, one of his camels overladen with treasure died on the way. Not knowing what death was, he ordered the camel-keeper to load it again and move on. When the camel would not get up there was a flash of realisa¬ tion of the transitory nature of this world. Bajid left his home and sought spiritual guidance from saint Kesavasvami of Bhajanagar. His guru asked him to worship Lord Rama and also inspired him to write religious poetry. Bajid composed nearly 500 Hindi poems and quite a few Marathi songs but used his guru's name instead of his own. Consequently the nature of his poetry remains unknown. A few compositions of Kesavasvami in which the Svamiji himself has been dealt with as a great guru could be perhaps Bajid s work. Kesavasvami’s other Muslim disciples have been Shahbeg and Shakarganj who express their boundless devotion for their guru and

Narayan H. Kulkarnee

228

contempt for material life in their Hindi and Marathi supreme cont Shah Navrang whose single song is available appears I

mini

VVaUWal olUUild



i

w/tAC

r

His poetry is Puranic rather than religious recounting tales from the Puranas with his own embellishments. Shah Husain Fakir has been mentioned with respect by poet Moropant in his Sanmam Mala, and also by poet Uddhav Chidghana. But his only surviving compositions are twelve songs in Hindi and one in Marathi. In t ie Marathi song he describes Lord Kr§na’s childhood very graphically. His Hindi compositions remind one of Surdas on the one hand and Kabir on the other. Syed Muhammad also sings of Lord Kr§na in his single available Marathi song, nothing is known of the Syed himself. (Could the song be a composition of Shaikh Muhammad Shrigondekar who was also a Syed?) Stray lines from Shaikh Sali Muhammad, which are of a mystic nature, have been discovered, but nothing more can be said about him or his poetry. Similar is the position of Saidu Lai, Banda Fakir, Burhan Shah whose stray, surviving compositions are tantalising and mystifying at the same time as we are completely in the dark about their personalities and the nature of their other works. VII In the context of our current, and perhaps continuous concern for national integration, the emergence of religious poets who were born in Islam but preached in terms of Hindu concepts, philosophy and ideology and expressed themselves in the language of the peo])le present a very interesting phenomenon. Apparently medieval Maharashtrian society was divided and subdivided by innumerable castes and subcastes and a variety of sects and sub-sects. Neverthe¬ less stabilising forces were alive and working in the great traditions of Hinduism and its popular derivative, the bhakii cult, whereby the society was held together. Integration flowed from the very nature of Hinduism which has no organised church and no set doctrine, which is not so much a religion as a way of life providing a broad perspective of looking at and experiencing all existence and beyond. Within its very vagueness and looseness was contained a very wide spectrum which could accommodate atheism and animism at the

Medieval Maharashtra and Muslim Saint-Poets

229

same time. Such a strong current of integrating forces could not but affect some individuals born as Muslims and inborn with strong religious urges and spiritual yearnings. What is interesting to note, however, is that Islam in Maharash¬ tra moulded itself, despite its doctrines, its mosques, its mullahs, to permit these saint-poets to live and to preach what in the eyes of the fundamentalists could be nothing but heresy. One might feel that not enough is known about their lives to advance definitive statements. But from the available facts it can be easily seen that these saint-poets were not ostracised, excommunicated or persecut¬ ed by the communities in which they lived for their beliefs and the expression of these beliefs in the tradition of earlier Marathi saintpoets. Undoubtedly the orthodox among the Muslim community castigated them in no uncertain terms and criticised them severely. But they do not appear to have gone to extremities in any case, despite the support which they could expect from the Muslim rulers of Maharashtra. The Muslim saint-poets did have their trials and tribulations no doubt, but they were not in the nature of severe religious oppression. Not only that these saint-poets were not boycotted nor, tortured during their lifetime, but even after their death the Muslim com¬ munities undertook to look after and maintain their tombs and observe their death and other anniversaries and make the usual olTerings. This can perhaps be attributed to the fact that they felt that the divines, at least some of them, possessed certain spiri¬ tual powers which would influence them beneficially. But among the traditions that have come down to us there is no indication for such presumption. Shall we, therefore, attribute it, howsoever in¬ directly, to the liberalising catholic Hindu influences working on

dargahs.

Islamic thought and culture? The Muslim saint-poets indicate that notwithstanding the Islamic invasion of medieval Maharashtra a common corpus of religious values was growing and these poets contributed to that growth. They were not an isolated group voicing unusual doctrines and theories but formed part of the mainstream of Maharashtrian culture. Notwithstanding political subjugation, occasional religious oppression and forcible proselytising efforts of the Sufis and others the \itality of Hinduism in Maharashtra was not diminished or if so, only marginally. Islam could not make the same impact it made elsewhere and did not strike such deep roots in the soil as to sprout

Narayon H. Kulkarnee 230 everywhere and engulf vast areas^ irrlenTooZh" po"-sed" powers that saint-poets horn in rally. They were basically sons ot tne son their legacy and their heritage. „vv>r>if> nf the Shaikh Muhammad Shrigondekar is a typical examp gradual growth of Maratha nationality m the religio



which began to embrace people of all '|'°“\is'heart He proclaimed that though he was an Avindha (Musi m) h.s heaj^^ was full of Govinda (Lord Krsna). In the manner o raTuPpoets he felt compelled to criticise the evil social

practtces

and

empty religious rituals that he felt htmself organic part of the Maharashtrian society he would not have felt Ld worked out such compulsions. In the rehg.ous -n “t of course he had realised the fundamental unity underlying the diver sity of religious faiths. So

had Shah

Muntoj.

Bahaman,

announced, “I, Shah Mutabaji (sic), '■'“Snise rences; 1 have searched for Paiiakaran and (ther y)

wto ff ^

Hindus and the Muslims”. , r • tr^rm Finally we may conclude this longish essay by clarifying the term saint-poets or poet saints. Unlike Roman Catholicism t ere ar strict canons or criteria in the Hindu religion for individuals. Those who observe all ethical ^^ demonstrate moral values by their actions, are believed to posse s certain spiritual powers, have been looked upon as ™ sainthood indicates the degree to which their spiritual attainments have brought them in reaching the goal of self-realisation a ultimate deliverance (mo/c5a). In some cases certain miraces been attributed to them by tradition, but this is not a decisive factor. In the history of Marathi literature a large number ot poets who wrote religious poetry (but not Puranic verses) have een labelled as saint-poets, primarily for the sake of literary convenience, to distinguish them from poets who wrote in different sty es. n respect of the major Muslim saint-poets they have been mentioned by later poets such as Mahipati and Moropant who have compi ed biographical sketches of or references to saint-poets. Some other saint-poets have composed hymns in praise of them (e.g. saint Riimadasa’s dratl on Shaikh Muhammad Shrigondekar). They have

Medieval Maharashtra and Maslint Saint-Poets

231

been rediscovered by modern Marathi researchers. Such light is yet to be shed on many more who might be lying in oblivion. In tlie present-day world, torn with dissensions and dilTercnccs, the tur¬ moil of violence, extremism and fundamentalism, it is good to remember and duty to pay our homage to those Marathi Muslim saint-poets who were steeped in humanism, perceived the basic unity in the apparent diversity of creeds and sects, practised highly ethical and spiritual lives and elevated those around them and quite a few of their descendants to a higher plane of existence through their preachings and living styles.

21 Vaisnavism in Medieval Orissa PRABHAT MUKHERJEE

The Eastern Gahgas came from Gangavadi in Mysore and reigned in Kaliriga for more than two Orissa

centuries, before

they conquered

proper. The Garigas of Kalihga professed Saivism and

Gokarnesvara on the Mahendragiri was their tutelary deity. In his early inscriptions Anantavarman Codagaiiga expressed his devo tion to Siva. Late in life he came under the influence of Vaisnavism. His crowning achievement was the work he began on the eve of his life-the construction of the temple of Jagannatha. It is quite possible that Codagaiiga’s enthusiasm was aroused, as he came into contact with some great personality. The first name which strikes us in this connection is that of Ramanuja who visited Orissa bet¬ ween AD 1122 and 1137. At Puri, Ramanuja established two wathas — one in his own name and the other in the name of his cousin and disciple Govinda. The temple of Laksmi within the temple precinct of Jagannatha was probably constructed as a result of Ramanuja s influence. Tradition, however, records that Yayati

Kesan

built

a

pre-

Ganga temple of Jagannatha. But if Yayati Kesan is identical with Mahafivagupta Yayati, who lived in the tenth century ad, then the existing temple was hardly old enough to deserve reconstruction. The Govindapur and Nagpur inscriptions of Laksmadeva seem to refer to an existing pre-Gariga temple of Jagannatha. It appears that perhaps on an incipient earlier structure

“the magnificent

assertion of autocratic devotion” was launched by Codagaiiga, and the work was continued in the reigns of his sons and was finished by Anarigabhima II, the youngest of them. The date of the com¬ pletion of the temple can be fixed up almost with precision which is AD 1197. During the reign of Kapilendra (ad 1434-64) Jagannatha began to be honoured as the state-deity of Orissa. Jagannatha did not monopolise their attention, as these kings did not depend upon

233

Vaisnavism in Medieval Orissa Jagannatha’s

dispensation

for their claims on the throne. But

Kapilendra and his son Puru?ottama had that necessity, and thus there was a closer relation between the political head of the state and the state-deity. Kapilendra’s inscriptions refer to his gifts to the Jagannatha temple, the temple-dancers and the regular recitation of Jayadeva’s Gita^ovinda. It is difficult to determine when Jagannatha was first worshipped in Orissa. It appears that Bhagavatism flourished in Orissa in the fifth century ad when the older powerful tribal deities were identi¬ fied with Vasudeva and Sarikar§ana under the new nomenclature of Kr§na and Balarama respectively. The tribal, later Sanskritized, goddess Ekanamsa was identified with Subhadra and completed the triad. The

gradual

absorption

of

heterogeneous

Jagannatha had a great effect on the medieval

attributes

by

Vai§navism of

Orissa. Though Jagannatha was a Visnuite deity, the form of his worship was materially affected as a result of Buddhist, Saivite and tantric influence. He was conceived as Buddha, §iva and even as the Bhairava. The preaching of Ramanuja and the zeal displayed by CoJagaiiga and his sons marked a turning point in the history of Vaisnavism. Jagannatha was rehabilitated as a Vijnuite deity, but the non-Vi?nuite elements in his worship were not rejected. On the eve of the Caitanya age, there was a transitional stage in the field of the

existing

religious

systems. The

concept

of the

avatdraso^Tm^ gained ground. In the Ganga-Vamsdnucarita of Vasudeva Rath, king Narasimha I has been described as the incar¬ nation of Man-Lion. The temple of Kurma at Sri-Kurmam testifies the popularity of the avatdra concept. Kasi Misra, the

preceptor of

Prataparudra erected a Varaha temple at Jajpur. Madhva s Dvaita doctrine became popular among the Vai?nava thinkers. The popu¬ larity of Saivism is also attested

by the

Bhuvaneshwar group of

temples, f^aktism had also a strong ground. Apart from the well known Vimala, the goddess Viraja of Jajpur was already famous by the fourteenth century, and she has been extolled by Sarala Dasa. The latter is said to have received inspiration from Sarala Candi of Jhankad. Relics of Buddhism were still found. The Buddhist monks lived in the rock-cut caves, but were looked down as ‘unbelievers in the Vedas’. The Oriya tradition refers to the following Siddhacaryas: Hadipa,

Kanhupa,

Matsyendranatha

Tantipa

Cauraiiginatha,

and Luipa. They

which had also votaries in Orissa.

Gorak?anatha,

were exponents of Nathism

Prabhat Mukherjee 234

Before the advent of Caitanya,Krsna was seldom conceived as the supreme and absolute being in Orissa. Kr?na as Gopala was through the feelings of affection and companmnship. On his way to Pun, Caitanya visited the temple of Saksi-Gopala, and Nityananda narrated the story of the image before the Master. Madhavendra Pun, the preceptor of Caitanya’s guru Isvara Pun, was an ardent devotee of Gopala. At Remuna, near Balasore, he did obeisance to the image of Gopmatha. Legends about Gopmatha are collected in Vinod-Caitanya Babaji’s Gopmdthacaritamrta. Visnu,‘favourite of the Gopala clan’, has been mentioned in the Meghesvara temple inscription. The copperplate grant of king Puru?ottama in favour of Potesvara Bhatta shows that the king sought for the benediction of Madana Gopala. All these show the popularity of the Gopala-Krsna concept in medieval Oris^. Jagannatha’s dress as Bala Gopala fascinated the Master. He recited a Hoka in honour of Jagannatha conceived as Gopala. During the Hira-Pahcami festival Jagannatha is regarded as Kr§na, the young cowherd. It is said that Jagannatha-Kr?tia longs at that time for the disport of Vpndavana. So he repairs to the Gundica house, which resembles the abode of the gopJs. ^ Madhavendra was the precursor of Caitanya in the service of Kr?na through conjugal passion. Before him, the consort-mode of devotion was unknown also in Bengal. The underlying idea of this, mode of devotion is that Kr§na alone is the object of devotion andi the mode of service through conjugal love by which damsels of Vraja adored him is the only true form of service. The gopis share between themselves Krsna’s passion as the lover. The quintessence of love is the supreme emotion (mahdbhdva) of which Radha is the worshipped

embodiment. The Radha idea came to Orissa from the north and not from the south. The concept of Radha has been given a prominent place in the teachings of Nimbarka. He was a Telugu but he settled at Vrndavana. The Radha idea was perfected, perhaps for the first time in Gitagovinda of Jayadeva who lived in the twelfth century. Ramananda Raya quoted from this book before the Master to show the superiority of Radha over other gopis. Ramananda studied the songs of Vidyapati and also the Sri Krsnakirtana of (Badu) Candidasa. In the mdthur songs of Vidyapati, Radha turns herself into Madhava (Krsna) due to constant thought of him. It has been said that Radha herself descended into this world as the

235-

Vaisnavism in Medieval Orissa

embodiment of separation from Krsna (Vipralambha-vigraha). The Radha idea spread in Orissa due to the influence and Caitanya.

teaching of

Formerly it was not popular in Orissa, though the

Gitagovinda was recited before Jagannatha at the time of barasingdra ceremony. From the biographies of Caitanya it is known that immediately after his initiation as a monk he made a tour in southern

India as

far as Ramesvaram. Then he decided to stay at Nilacala or Pun. He stayed for sometime as a guest of Sarvabhauma, an erudite scholar in Vedanta, who became his disciple after a learned dis¬ putation which took place for seven days

(ad

1510). From

Puri he

went to Rajamahendn where the governor Ramananda Raya a reputed scholar and much honoured Vaisnava devotee, became his disciple. Then after visiting different holy places of southern and western India, Caitanya returned to Puri in 1512. From a letter of Ramananda Raya, Prataparudra, the Gajapati King of Orissa, was informed of the activities of Caitanya. He met him and paid homage to him. From 1516 till his death in 1533 Caitanya never left Puri. Caitanya considered Lord Jagannatha to be

Kr§na

himselt.

Whenever he saw the deity he imagined him to be Krsna at Kuruksetra. At the same time Caitanya was believed to be the living (sacala)

embodiment

of

Jagannatha. In

the

Oriya^ Caitanya-

bhdgavata of Isvaradasa it has been stated that Gauraiiga (Cai¬ tanya) is Jagannatha himself. In the same text he has also been described as Buddha’s incarnation. Kavikarnapura writes that the Master spent 20 years out of his ascetic life of 24 years at Snksetra (Puri). The congregation of the devotees of Caitanya at Pun con¬ sisted of all Vaisnavas, irrespective of sectarian distinctions, who chanted the name of Hari. Kirtana, especially before the chariot of Jagannatha had an emotional appeal to

all Oriya Vaisnavas.

is

god-dedicated personality and his devotional fervour at the sight of Jagannatha, impressed the Vaisnavas of Orissa who took him to be the embodiment of Jagannatha. It was also believed that Cai¬ tanya was an accomplished scholar who had authoritative know¬ ledge of the scriptures. Acyutananda writes that the five associates {pancasaklm-Sag^nnatha, Balarama, Acyutananda, Yasovanta and Ananta) participa¬ ted in the kirtana processions of Caitanya, the last four being nonBrahmanas. The word sakhd had a theoretical implication. In

Prabhat Mukherjee

236

Orissa and Bengal, the disciples of Caitanya were conceived as associates {gana) of Krsna in Vrndavana—‘an extremely logical development of the Vaisnava theory of incarnation which regards not only Caitanya as Krsna, but also his followers as Krsna s associates and beloved ones’. These five sakhds of Caitanya in the Kaliyuga were supposed to have impersonated the five conipanions of Krsna in Dvaparayuga who were Dama, Sudama, Srivasta, Suvala and Subahu. According to Acyutananda,

12,000 followers

including the Panca-sakhd participated in the kirtana ^ processions of the Master. In CaurdH-djfid we find Caitanya seated in the Mukti Mandapa of the Jagannatha temple along with these five comrades, the king and Sarvabhauma. Among these five comrades Balarama Dasa was the oldest. He lives in the memory of the people as the author of the Oriya Rdmdyana. He was a Karana by caste and fought for the rights of the Sudras. In his Veddntasdraguptagiid he wrote that the Brahmanas resented his participation in the discus¬ sion regarding Vedanta in the Mukti Mandapa of the Jagannatha temple. Balarama’s chief seat was the Gandharva-mtif/m on the mouth of the Banki river in Puri. According to Tsvara Dasa, Bala¬ rama had a vision that the Lord would incarnate again and that he would go to Nilacala in the robes of a monk. Jagannatha Dasa is famous for his Oriya translation of the Bhdgavata Purdiia. He was a reciter of the Purana in the Jagannatha temple. According to Divakara, Caitanya gave him the epithet

ati-bada (very big) for

his piety and bearing. He founded the Ati-Bada sect. His chief seat is now called ‘Bada-Oriya’ matho. The third comrade Vesovanta belonged to the Mahanayaka caste. He is remembered for his work Govindacandratikd which is now recited by the mendicants of the Natha sect. Acyutananda Mohanti

was the patron-saint of the

cowherd caste. His works Smyasamhitd and the Andkdrasamhitd deal with the theory of void. He heard an oracle telling him to serve Caitanya. Forthwith he repaired to

Puri and bowed at the

feet of the Master. Ananta Mahapatra founded the Sisu sect. His seat is at Tentuliapada in the Cuttack district. He met Caitanya while he was resting at Konaraka on his way to Puri. The important Oriya followers of Caitanya other than the five comrades were the followers who accepted the Caitanya faith, the priests of the

Jagannatha temple and other officers who were

ordered by the king to attend the

master, and Prataparudra, the

king himself. Among the followers, the most prominent was Rama-

237'

Vaisnavism in Medieval Orissa

nanda Raya who was a celebrated devotional poet and dramatist as well. During his religious discourse with Caitanya at Rajamahendri he became his devotee. His greatest contribution to the doctrine of the Caitanya

faith

was his

delineation of gopibhdva. This idea

he got from the south. The next important follower of Caitanya was Madhavi Dasi. She was a cousin of Ramananda. She was a gifted writer. In the anthology, Padakalpataru her five poems have been incorporated. Her poem Hagadananda Comes from Nilacala to Console Saci’ reveals the agony of the aged mother of the Master, whose only surviving son renounced the world. Gopala Guru when he was a boy served the Master in the house of Kasi Misra.

He

Khuntia,

had

initiation

Paramananda Mahapatra, Sikhi

from

Vakresvara

Kasi Misra, Madhava Pattanayaka,

Mohanti,

Pandita.

Kanci

Mamu Thakura,

Pradumnya Misra, Sankara Pandita,.

Svapnesvara,

and Tulasi Misra were important

followers of Caitanya. It is stated in the Sanskrit and Bengali biographies of Caitanya that king Prataparudra was patron of the Caitanya faith. Vrndavana Dasa has given an embellished account of Prataparudra’s devotion to Caitanya. He always met the Master whenever he came to Puri. He ordered the Jagannatha temple priests to carry out the wishes of the Master. He ordered the royal officials to arrange accommoda¬ tion for Caitanya and his party during his journey to Bengal and to ‘wait on him, day and night’. He also participated in the nandotsava festivals in which Caitanya took part. Even before he accepted the

Caitanya

faith

Prataparudra

was

well-read

in

Vaisnava

theology. He quoted appropriate passages from the Bhdgavata when he first met Caitanya which weie appreciated

by the Master. The

companions of Caitanya also received royal patronage. Notwith¬ standing all these it is difficult to say whether Prataparudra was an actual convert to the Caitanya faith. Prejudiced historians without a critical examination of facts have very often accused Prataparudra on the ground that his ‘adiction’ to the religion of love made him indifferent and callous in regard to the security of the state which eventually called forth Muslim invasions in Orissa. But they ignore the basic fact that other Hindu states of India, with non-Vaisnava rulers, were also conquered by the Muslims. As S.K. De has rightly remarked: “As a man of devout inclinations, he [Prataparudra] was probably impressed by the religious personality of Caitanya and. paid a willing homage, but beyond this, there is no evidence ofi

Prabhat Mukherjee 238 Prataparudra’s actual conversion.” R.D. Banerji’s theory that the acceptance of Vaisnavism was the real cause of the Muslim conquest of Orissa twenty-eight years after the death of Prataparudra is evidently fallacious. Equally fallacious is the view of some recent writers that the Radha Krsna cult which Caitanya universaliscd in Orissa did eternal harm to the nation’s character, training and social morals. Such views reveal the lack of understanding even the basic canons

of historical criticism. Cai¬

tanya did not preach any new religion in Orissa. He only revitalized the tenets which were already existing and took them to the caste and class-ridden masses which brought a new meaning of lite to them. In coastal Orissa, most of the Brahmanas were opposed to Caitanyaism, though some of them took the Vaisnava suiname ddsa. Caitanya came to Orissa at a time when the non-Brahmanas challenged the monopoly of the Brahmanas in intellectual pursuits. Ramananda Raya, the most prominent follower of Caitanya m Orissa was a non-Brahmaiia.

Four among the five Orissan sakhds

or comrades of Caitanya were non-Brahmanas. Two non-Brahma¬ nas, Syamananda and Rasika Muran, spread the Caitanya faith m Orissa in the seventeenth century. Baladeva Vidyabhu§ana, another non-Brahmana, was the greatest exponent

of the dogmas of the

faith in the eighteenth century. The Oriya Brahmanas did not like the Caitanya movement dominated by the Sudras. More than a •century ago. Hunter wrote; , The adoration of Caitanya has become a sort of family worship throughout

Orissa .... The worship

of Caitanya

extends

throughout Orissa and I have a long list of landed families who worship him with daily rituals in household chapels, dedicated to his name. At this moment, Caitanya is the apostle of the com¬ mon people in Orissa. The Brahmanas, unless they happen to enjoy grants of lands, in his name, ignore his work. In almost every Brahmana village, the communal shrine is dedicated to Siva, but in the villages of ordinary husbandmen, it is Vi§nu who is worshipped and Caitanya is remembered as the great teacher of the proletarian faith. So far as the philosophy of the medieval school of Vaisnavism in Orissa is concerned, there are a few tenets which make a diffejence with Gaudiya (Bengal) as well as the southern forms of

239

Vaisnavism in Medieval Orissa

Vaisnavism. These tenets are of heterogeneous origin on which even Buddhist influence may be discerned. The spirit of the supreme being (Purusa), immanent in the void, is conceived as the voidpersonified {Alekh Purusa). Also known as Sunya-Purusa, the con¬ cept thus corresponds on the one hand with the Vedantic concept of nirguna brahman and on the other with the Buddhist concept of sunyatd

or

vacuity.

When

Alekh-Anakdra (unformed) assumes

form, it is known as the formless Visnu. A/ra/cara is the creative aspect of Anakdra or the unformed absolute being. It is also known as Mahavisnu, Virata Purusa, Adi Brahman, etc. Vinduor material potency is dropped from the Void. When Sakti or energy longs to create it becomes massive {ghanibhuta) and appears as bindu. It is conceived as the generative element as well as the female principle. Like the potential and movable energies these two are but^ the two faces of the same reality, symbolised by Krsna and Radha. The love-fluid of Radha-KrSna is prema-rupa manifested in the eternal rasa exploit. Apart from the influence of the Vedantic concept of Brahman arid its

or the Buddhist

concept

of myatd and karund {prajnd

and updya), Tantric influence is also there in Orissa Vaisnavism which is indicated by the theory of thirty-two letters. First comes Alekh, the absolute, inexpressible by the letters {andksara). From the effulgence is caused vindu-brahma which along with ardhamdtrd form om or ekdksara or single-letter. It is duplicated into ra and ma, denoting Radha and Krsna respectively. Their love-ardour gives birth to premarupd or candrdvali. These three principles when doubled represent six corners of the eternal rasa arena symbolised by six angles known as Subhadra,

Rahgadevi, Lilavati, Priyavati,

Vrndavati and Ratnarekha. The six angles are subsequently expand¬ ed into eight angles of sixteen letters presided over by eight gopis. Their further multiplication with Radha and Krsna in

the eternal

rdsallld explain the symbolism of thirty-two letters. This is how the tantric symbolism of letters has been brought in relation to the Caitanyite concept of Radha-Krspa communion. The Yogic concepts have also influenced the medieval

Vaisnavism in Orissa.

philosophy of

According to this theory, the

universe {brahmdnda) may be identified with the body {pinda). That is why, for salvation astdhga-yoga is necessary. There are fifty airs in the body and six limbs known as six cakras. Air from these limbs should be forced towards susumnd, the nerve channel. Susumnd

Prabhat Mukherjee 240 along with channels ida and pingala

form the triveni. The usual

techniques of kaya-sadhana or disciplining of body and mind have been described quite in accordance with those of the other tradi^^^Unfortunately there is no clear-cut exposition of the philosophy of the medieval school of Orissa Vaisnavism. Contradictory state¬ ments make the situation embarrassing and textual corruptions add more to the difficulties. The reason for this drawback lies in the nature of medieval Vai?navism in Orissa itself. Theories were freely but unsystematically taken from other sects and absorbed. New interpretations have been given to the borrowed ideas so as to make them acceptable to all. But in doing consistency has been ignored.

so the question of logical

22 ^ankaradeva and Assam Vaisnavism SATYENDRANATH SARMA

Background Assam, known as Kamarupa in ancient times, witnessed a tre¬ mendous Vai?navite revival in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries of the Christian era. The movement was initiated by Sahkaradeva, a man of versatile genius, in the last decade of the fifteenth century and gained strength and momentum in the succeeding two centuries. Before proceeding to unfold its history and characteristics it would be pertinent to trace its background. Assam in the fifteenth century was inhabited by heterogeneous elements of people speaking different languages and dialects and following diverse shades of cultural life. Although Assamese, and Indo-Aryan language, emerged as the most powerful medium of expression by the begin¬ ning of the thirteenth century, majority of the people belonged to the Indo-Mongoloid race; some of them followed their tribal cus¬ toms and professed traditional religious beliefs. Politically the land was divided into several kingdoms indulging in constant friction and conflict for supremacy. The political instability contributed towards the creation of chaotic conditions in the social sphere. The tantric form of worship was highly popular with the people, who being allured by the outward attractions of the cult were practising it with gruesome rites. Saivism, Vasudevaism (a form of tantric Vai§navism) and Saktism were the dominant cults besides a few other minor cults like Nathaism, crypto-Buddhism and the cult of Manasa, the snake goddess. It may be mentioned in this connection that almost all the religious cults noted above were practised according to the tantric rites, accompanied by animal sacrifices and some of them prescribed practices of extreme leftism such as pahca-makdras for their votaries. The monotheistic belief in God, though not unknown, receded to the background, giving prece¬ dence to the belief in many gods who were worshipped for worldly happiness and gains and not for liberation from the worldly bon-

Satyendranath Sarma

242 daK The medieval charitras or hagiograph.cal works on the lives rf^he Vabnavite preachers and saints and some of the rehg.ou Vs of the sixtemth and seventeenth centuries throw sufficient h^fo: ffieVo'nfused and somewhat chaotic stam of mhg ous life during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries of the Chf Stmn «r^ It must not however, be inferred from the above that the pan theistic belief’and the monotheistic doctrine as TInanisads and the Gita were not quite alien to the people o Til fact the Vedic religion accompanied by Varna^ram Assam. In fact, the ^ ^ centuries of the ?hrXeL atd sul^^^^

waves of Aryan migration from the

Sind and north India reinforced the Assam But Assam, being predominantly inhabited

non Aryan

indigenous people, the Upanijadic concept of God was lost sig and the Puranic polytheism blended with tantric practices began to gam increasing popu ari ^ The cult of monotheistic bhakti which the mers brought to the forefront was also not “f ofneoDle This is evident from the writings of the pre-S^kar po«s Uke Hemasarasvati, Harivara Vipra and who flourished in the thirteenth and Christian era. Lines like Maditavese gatman, Madbavese pm, Mbdhama pare jand bandhu adhi dn Hemasarasvat, clear^ echoes the monotheistic bhakli concept of the “0-''n‘5nnvite poets of the succeeding centuries. Translations of the with a Vaisnavite stamp by Madhava Kandali in the middle of the fourteenth century and adaptations of a few Mahabharata episod into narrative kdryas by the pre-Sankaradeva poets devotion as the only way of releasing oneself from the bondage the world bear testimony to the existence of a thin current ot devotional Vaisnavism in Assam. The highly ritualistic and priest-ridden complex religious rues of the Brahmanical religion were not considered suitable for t e majority of the people who belonged to the non-Aryan ethnic groups with little or no knowledge of Sanskrit language in w ic the Hindu rites were conducted. Sahkaradeva, therefore, consi ere it desirable to evolve a religion which would not only be simpler in form but also easily practisable by all sections of people irrespective of their caste, social position and educational attainment. The monotheistic bhakti cult with emphasis on sravana (hearing oi

Sarikaradeva and Assam Vaisnavism

243

listening), kirtana (singing or reciting) and sniarana (remembering) of the names of the adorable Lord was found suitable to satisfy the needs of the times. Sahkaradeva, therefore, embarked on the arduous expeditions of reorienting the religious life of the people of Assam on the basis of the monotheistic bhakti cult propounded in the Bhdgavata-purdna and the Gitd. They substituted the unintelligi¬ ble Sanskrit versions of the religious scriptures by easily under¬ standable Assamese versions of important religious works including the two great epics and some Vaisnavite Puranas. But before we discuss the important characteristics of the Vaisnava faith and movement and its literature, initiated by Sahkaradeva, it would be worthwhile to give a life-sketch of the initiator, Srt Sahkaradeva. Sahkaradeva was born in the middle of the fifteenth century at Alipukhuri near present Bardowa in the modern district of Nowgong in central Assam. The earlier biographies of the saint composed in the seventeenth century have not mentioned the date of his birth. Daityari Thakur, one of the earliest reliable bio¬ graphers who composed his work in c. ad 1620 has clearly mentioned the date of his demise as ad 1568 (Saka 1490). His contemporary biographer Bhu^ana Dvija, however, has not men¬ tioned any date or year of his birth or death. But the later bio¬ graphers of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries have mostly recorded ad 1449 (Saka 1371) as the year of his birth. Another biographer of the eighteenth century, viz., Aniruddha Dasa gives ad 1463 (Saka 1385) as the year of §ahkaradeva’s birth. Edward Gait in the History of Assam says that the date of his birth is possibly thirty or forty years too early.”^ A close perusal of the internal evidences furnished by the biographers leave some scope to doubt the authenticity of the earlier date, e.g., ad 1449, but there is scarcely any doubt about the year of his departure from the mundane world. The Vai5navite tradition, however, accepts un¬ reservedly Saka 1371 (ad 1449) as the birth-year of the great reformer. For want of any definite evidence to the contrary, the traditional date, widely recognised by the people for the last two hundred years, has also been accepted by some modern scholars.^ If the earlier year of his birth is accepted, then it must be granted that Sahkaradeva lived for 119 years, certainly a long span of life for a human being. Considering the robust health, the regulated and disciplined life and balanced mental disposition of the saint it is not unlikely that he lived for nearly 120 years, the span of life

Satyendranath Sarina

244 generally attributed to ma/zapwn/5a5.

* ^

K5ma-

He mis fifth in descent from Candtvara who ™‘f^ rrma during the middle of fourteenth century from Gttndadesa (modern Bengal) and settled in central Assam as the head of fiTuvans (landholders). Sankaradeva’s father was Kusumvara a focaUhief of considerable power and affluence, but unfortunately both Kusumvara and his wife Satyasandha, mother of Sankaradeva dfed during the childhood of the great sa.nh

H,s grandmother

therefore, looked

thoroughly

after his upbrmgtng and welfare. He was educated in Sanskrit learning and m due course settled

down as a householder. Strong in built, extremely

handsome

leply learned, pursuasive in speech, innately religious in outlook Inkaradeva attained in course of time, an extraordinary attractive personality which stood him in great stead in winning over people of all Strata of society. so At the death of his first wife, his innate religious propensity, long dormant, found an opportunity

to come to

the surface.

Approximately at the age of thirty, accompanied by a few com¬ panions he set out for a long course of pilgrimage ^nd visi Lost all the holy places of India from Kanyakuman to Badarikasrama. All those who accompanied him turned back from Pun and did not proceed further. The rest of his long journey was under¬ taken alone and for twelve years he moved from place to place meeting religious saints and scholars and observing religious trends in different parts of the country. He must have been deep y im¬ pressed by the nature and working of the neo-Vais navite movements initiated by his predecessors Madhvacarya,

like

Ramananda and

Ramanuja,

Kabir

in

Nimbarkacarya,

different regions of

medieval India. Sankaradeva’s reference to the popularity of songs of Kabir in Varanasi and Puri in his work KJrtanaghosd bespeak of his contact with religious movements that were gaining popularity at that time.'' • . • • i It is not unlikely that Sankaradeva might have received spiritual initiation from some Vaisnava saint at Puri where he spent more than a year. Curiously enough he has maintained complete silence about the identity of his spiritual guide, although he has not failed to pay obeisance to his guru in the opening lines of some of his poetical compositions.^ Aniruddha Kayastha, who composed the fifth canto of the Bhdgavata Purdna in the seventeenth century says that Saiikaradeva received spiritual initiation at Puri and obtained

245

Sankaradeva and Assam Vaisnavism

religious orders (djna) to propagate Vaisnavism/’ Biographers of Saiikaradeva uniformly say that it was Jagadisa Misra who at the behest of the Lord of Jagannatha-k?etra hastened to Assam to handover a copy of the Bhdgavata-purdna with the commentary of Sridharasvami to Sahkaradeva at Bardowa. Aniruddha Kayastha s statement, when interpreted in the context of his receiving the copy of the Bhdgavata-purdna, leads one to conclude that Sahkaradeva, most probably, was initiated to the path of devotion at Pun where he is said to have stayed for a considerable part of the period of pilgrimage. ■ u ■ a After his return from his long pilgrimage and having obtained a copy of the

Bhdgavata-purdna with

Srtdharasvami s commentary

Saiikaradeva set himself seriously to the task of propagating the new faith of devotion based on the teachings of the

Bhdgavata-^

purdna and the Gita. Having transferred the office of the Siromam Bhuyan (chief of the Bhuyan) to one of the cousins, Sahkaradeva managed to procure a band of faithful followers to the new faith, with whose help he constructed a spacious devagrha where prayers and religious discourses were regularly held. The first spectacular step for attracting people and popularising the cult was taken through a

pantomimic

show known as cihnaydtrd which

was

enacted against backdrop of painted scenes of the seven Vaikunthas or heavenly abodes with a presiding Vi§nu over each. The show presented the dancing and singing heavenly denizens in appro¬ priate costumes. Sahkaradeva himself painted the scenes of the seven celestial regions, directed the music and dance and himself appeared in some vital roles of the show. This theatrical show highly impressed the audience and those who

had been sceptical

till then of his new role as a preacher, were now convinced of his extraordinary genius. . c • u The new faith and the movement did not take a definite shape till the receipt of the Bhdgavata-purdna with Sndhara’s commen¬ tary. The possession of the copy of the Purdna through the agency of Jagadisa Misra not only helped him to give a clear and definite shape to his faith of Bhagavatism, but also enabled him to render the original texts of the said Purana into lucid Assamese verses. Daityari Jhakur, one of the earliest biographers of the saint, narrates this event in the following way: Sahkaradeva listened with rapt attention to the exposition of

Satyendranath Sarma 246 the

Bnagamm-purma by Jagadisa MiSra and realised importance of the B/idgavam as a scripture without

the

It was the only scripture that determined Visnu-Krsna as t only adorable deity, the chanting and and real dharma and single-minded devotion (mkanfka bhakn) and holy association (sat-smga) as indispensable elements of faith.’

The cult is further reinforced by the teachings of the Bhagavad gitd which enjoins complete self-surrender to God. It has been announced by Sahkaradeva that a true Vai5nava should not wor ship any other God but Vi5nu, must not enter ”1^° " other than that of Vi5nu, nor should he partake of the offerings made to any other God.** . uic When the movement was gradually gaining momentum native place at Bardowa it received a temporary setback on account of a clash between the Bhuyans and the Kachans, a nonAryan tribe of central Assam. The Bhuyans, being numerically weak, were forced to abandon their native place and having crossed the Brahmaputra settled at Gcangmukh on the north ban . They were at this place hardly for five years when frequent raids from the new Koch power and the Bhutanese forced them to move further east and they finally settled themselves at Dhuahat within the territorial jurisdiction of the Ahom kings. Here, at Dhuahat, Saiikaradeva started his proselytising activi¬ ties in right earnest and within a brief period gained a large number of adherents. The simplicity and purity of the new cult in contrast to the sacerdotal

or the ritual-dominated Brahmanical

cult was the prime factor in attracting the unsophisticated masses to the new faith. The portal of this simple Vai5navite faith

was

kept wide open for all castes and communities and no discrimina¬ tion was made on the basis of caste or status while conferring initiation or ordaining disciples. The Brahmana and the untouch¬ able were to be treated alike. Because of this generous approach the number of disciples began to increase gradually which, in greatly alarmed the priestly class. It began to offer

turn

hostility

by abusing and molesting some of the followers of oahkaiadeva. Although Sahkaradeva silenced his opponents in a religious dis¬ putation, their hostility did not cease. They even approached the reigning Ahom monarch with the allegation that Sahkaradeva had

Sankaradeva and Assam Vaisnavism

247

preached heretical doctrines among the masses. But the Ahom king, not being Hinduised till then, did not deem it necessary to interfere in religious matters of the Hindus and therefore acquit¬ ted the saint. • r>wi i * The most important achievement of §ankaradeva m Dhua la was the acquisition of Madhavadeva to his fold, who conversion from the Sakta faith proved himself to be his ablest and the most faithful disciple. Madhava’s unflinching devotion and deep allegiance to his ^unt, ultimately, prompted the latter to nominate him to be his successor as the head of the Vaisnavite community. Like Guru Nanak who, instead of nominating any ot his relatives, selected Angad to succeed him, fiankaradeva, too nominated his most faithful and efficient disciple Madhava, to succeed him after his demise. Madhava was originally a staunch Sakta, but being convinced of the superiority of the pat i o devotion and loving faith in a religious dispute, finally accepted Sahkaradeva as his spiritual guide. Madhava was a scholar, a poet, an efficient organiser and a fine musician. This uniqu combination of two extraordinary persons gave a renewed momen¬ tum to the progress of Vai§navism in Assam. .At

While at Dhuahat, the Bhuyans were engaged by the Ahom King Chuhungmung (1497-1539) in catching wild elephants for the royal stable. Due to the negligence of the Bhuyans no wild elephant could be captured for which the entire community of Bhuyan who were mostly related to Saiikaradeva, was taken to task. Some of the Bhuyans including Han Bhuyan, son-m-law o Sahkaradeva, and Madhavadeva were arrested. Han Bhuyan was killed and Madhava was ultimately released. This unreasonab y hostile attitude of the Ahom monarch embittered Sankara s mind He considered the Ahom territory unsafe for the propagation of his cult Western Assam, ruled by the Koch king Naranarayana who was known to be an enlightened monarch, was thought to be a better resort by Sankaradeva and his relatives. tage of the Koch invasion of the Ahom territory m 1546, Sanka adeva and his followers migrated to western Assam. Th^ settled temporarily at different places like Kapalabari, Chapara Chunpara and finally the saint-reformer established himself at Patbausi, Thus, the third phase of his life commenced with his entry into the Koch kingdom. Here, in Kamriipa, Narayana Jhakur, one of

248

Satyendranath Sarma

the most important resourceful disciples, was initiated to the new faith Narayana Jhakm's original name was Bhavananda. He was a well-to-do merchant. He was baptised as Narayana Thakur by Sahkaradeva after his initiation ceremony. This resourceful and devoted follower was instrumental in bringing a large number o people to the religious fold of his guru and also considerably helped in augmenting the material resources of the religious establishment of Sahkaradeva. At Patbausi, the prayer a (namaghar) and the shrine having been constructed, regular religious discussion and discourse, prayer services, recitation ot the holy texts, dramatic performances, were constantly held. Having permanently settled at Patbausi Sahkaradeva, accompanied by 120 followers went on his second pilgrimage as far as Puri. It is narrated in the biographies that he met Caitanyadeva at Puri and on his way to Puri visited the matha of Kabir where he met the grand-daughter of the latter. The biographer’s statement of the meeting with Caitanya of Bengal cannot be accepted as the saint of Bengal expired in ad 1533, whereas Sankaras second pilgrimage took place around AD 1550. As Patbausi, Damodaradeva, Harideva and Ananta Kandali, the three principal Brahmana associates of Sahkaradeva, embraced Vai§navism under the religi¬ ous inspiration of the Master. The acquisition of these influential Brahmanas helped him to enlist the sympathy and cooperation of the section of Brahmanas who had so long, as a class, remained somewhat averse to the creed of Sankara. Even then, there was no dearth of people who brought allegations against him and his followers in the court of the Koch king Naranarayana (ad 154085) that he was preaching and propagating a faith contrary to the traditional Hindu religion. The king ordered his arrest, but the timely warning of prince Sukladhvaja who had married in the family of Sankara enabled the latter to escape. Through the good office of prince Sukladhvaja, Sankara was summoned to the court with the assurance that no physical harm would be done to him. He appeared in the royal court, recited a self-composed royal panegyric and a devotional Sanskrit prayer in praise of the Lord. The king was highly impressed by his imposing personality and the scholarly achievements of the saint. Sankara convincingly established the truth and superiority of his faith in the learned assembly of the court. The king, highly pleased with his saintly behaviour, profound learning and dignified appearance rewarded

Sankaradeva and Assam Vaisnavism

249

him with rich presents and assured him safety m the free propaga tion of his creed. During the last few years of his life he had to keep liasion with the Koch court which indirectly helped his religion. At the request of prince Sukladhvaja he designed and directed t e weaving of a place of cloth, forty yards in length, depicting Vrndavana-sports of Krsna. This embroidered cloth depicting the early life of Gopala Krsna was presented to king. The latter ex¬ pressed his desire to be initiated by Sankara to Vaisnavism but the saint knowing how difficult it would be for a king to observe strictly the conduct of a true Vaisnava tried to avoid it by eer ring the date of initiation. But to save him, as it were from that unpleasant position, a fatal boil appeared in sorne of is body which caused his death in the month of Bhadra (AugustSeptember) of Saka 1940. //is Personality , • i * Biographers uniformly speak of the great physical strength,

beauty and charm of the saint-reformer. Madhavadeva in a song in which he paid his obeisance to his guru describes the saint s physical charm in the following way: He is handsome to look. His fair body shines like the refulgent sun. His very sight, pleasing to the assembly of people, can remove and destroy sin. He is naturally handsome without the aid of ornaments and decorations. He is dignified, majestic m appearance and wise. His lotus-like eyes are wide and bright and his complexion is pleasant like the rays of the moon, is gait is dignified like that of an elephant and his voice is deep like the rumbling of a cloud.^ The above description

of the Vai§navite saint by his most

favourite disciple, even shorn of its poetic no doubt about the personal beauty and charm of the Master. A1 biographers speak of his robust health and extraordinary physical stre^ngth. It is believed that he could swim across the Brahmaputra during the rainy season and could tame a ferocious bull by holding it by horns. ... A scholar without arrogance, a steadfast pursuer ° ’ persuasive in arguments, humanistic in outlook, a °^ Lthout worldly attachment, a staunch believer ,n monotheism

Satyendranath Sarma

250

who did not hesitate to expel his favourite disciple to maintain the purity of his cult, an astute organiser of social reform, a versatile artist and poet, a successful religious discourser who could enliven his talk with appropriate stories, parables and humour, a man of deep foresight, Sahkaradeva was appropriately considered by his followers to be an incarnation of the Divine. Religious Teachings The religion of love and his followers was not a Bhdgavata-purana, the Gita Niirada Bhakti-sutra and

devotion preached by Sahkaradeva and new religion. It was embedded in the and some other Vai5navite works like Sdndilya Bhakti-sutra. Credit goes to

Sahkaradeva for adapting that religion to the need of the people and for democratising the monotheistic Vaisnavite faith, which being confined to Sanskrit scriptures, was not accessible to the common man. Like all other medieval Vai§nava schools of India, the neo-Vaisnavite movement in Assam was essentially based on devotional elements. Absolute self-surrender at the feet of the Lord, and a feeling of ecstatic joy and happiness in serving or worship¬ ping Him are the two main characteristics of bhakti. It is based on faith, not on dialectics. Sahkaradeva also preached bhakti both as a means and an end of human existence. It has been said that m Kaliyuga there is no better mode of serving God than bhakti, inas¬ much as God is easily pleased by devotion alone. Further, it is easy to practise and could be adopted by all, irrespective of caste, creed, sex and status.^® Sahkaradeva’s attitude to bhakti is amply illustrat¬ ed in the following lines: Bhakti is the mother, father, brother, kith and kin and the highest treasure of life. It is the highest ideal (gati), the desire {mati) and the guiding force of life. It is the highest good and the wealth of life {vitta) and possesses germs of liberation. It is the solace of life, the vital breath of the body (prana) as it were. There is no other path of life save and except bhakti in this world and the next.^^ Knowledge (jhdna) without bhakti, according to Sahkaradeva, is futile; the process of seeking God according to the path of know¬ ledge (jndna-mdrga) is compared to husking of seedless paddy.' The necessity of knowledge for God-realisation or liberation is not

^ankaradeva and Assam Vaisnavism

251

altogether ruled out. Knowledge is considered essential m theprocess of self-realisation, but any separate effort is unnecessary for it. It comes automatically after a certain stage of the devotional process is attained. The highest ideal of a true devotee, according to §arikaradeva, is not the attainment of the state of absorption in the attributeless Brahman, but an eternal continuity with God which affords unique advantage for serving the Lord. The attitude of Sahkaradeva and his followers towards karma (action) is on the pattern of the Gita which exalts desireless action performed in the name of God. Of the three types of ceremonial actions, nitya (daily), naimittika (occasional) and kdmya (motivated or having attachment), Sahkaradeva speaks vehemently against the last type where selfish motive predominates. The other two types are tolerated, but they must be conducive to the development of bhakti}^ Of the two types of /i/ia/ct/, M/comcr (having desire for fruit) and niskdma (desireless), the latter has been highly extolled and discussed in detail in all the devotional works of the Sankarite period.. . The devotional works mention nine ways or modes of prai.tising devotion. They are (i) Havana, act of listening to the names and sports of the Lord, (i7) kirtana, the act of chanting prayers, {Hi) smarana, the act of remembering the forms, sports and names of the adorable deity, (iv) padasevana or the act of serving the feet of the Lord, (v) arcand or the rite of ceremonial worship of the image of the deity, (vi) vandana, the act of salutation and prostra¬ tion at the feet of the Lord. The next three elements of devotion cannot strictly be called ways or modes of bhakti] rather they indicate devotional relationship between the worshipper and the worshipped. Thus, (vn) dasya consists in serving the Lord with the attitude of a selfless faithful slave, (v///) is based on the sense of friendship between the adorer and the adored, and {ix) atmanivedana signifies complete self-surrender.^^ Of the above ninefold bhakti, Assam Vaisnavism especially extolled

and prescribed the first two, viz., Havana and kirtana as highly efficacious modes for the inculcation of devotional attitude of mm . These are not subject to restriction of time, place and person. In this connection Sahkaradeva says, “Although there are nine ways of devotion to Madhava, . Again, Rama ndma narakesari. Kanaka kasipu kalikdla / Jdpaka Jana Prahldda Jimi,

(Bala Kanda, vol. I, p. 30)

Pdlihi dali surasdla II

“^Ayodhya Kanda, vol. 2, p. 259. It is stated elsewhere (p. 181) that; Vdraka Rama ndma Kaliata jaga jeii / HtLi tarana tdnananara ten

I

®“B.da Kanda, vol- 1, p. 29. ■’Uttaia Kantja, vol. 3, pp. 317-18. ’ Arnya Kilncja, vol. 2, p. 293. There is no diiTerence between jildna and bhakti (Bhagatihigydnalii nahirn kacliu blieda), diTerences lies in their execution

Tulasiddsa: Rdmacaritamdnasa and Bhakti

373

and attribution, see Uttara Kanda, vol. 3, pp. 353ff. ^'‘Sabakai mamatd taga baton. Mama pada manahin bartdhi bari dori I

(Aranya Kanda)

"°Ibid. “uttara Kanda, vol. 3, p. 315. “Ibid.,p. 316. *®Ibid. *^Vaisnavism, Saivism and Minor Religious Systems, pp. 74-75.

^'Ayodhya Kanda, vol. 2, p. 105. “Ibid., pp. 78, 106. “Aranya Kanda, vol. 2, p. 320. Jati pamtikula dharma vaddi, Dhana bala parijana gima caturdl / Bhagati hina nara sohai kaisd, Vinu iala vdrida dekhia jaisd //

^^Uttara Kanda, vol. 3, p. 281. Sankara bhajana vind nara, Bhagati na pdbai mori I

Rama himself worships Siva.' Fuji purdri iadhu sanamdne (Ayodhya Kanda, vol. 2, p. 188 cf. also pp. 87, 89). “Pranabananda Jash, History of Saivism, chap. 9, pp. 134ff. This composite form of the deity is known as Harihara. Tulasidasa is well aware about this syncretistic form as he frequently speaks of Harihara (Bala Kanda, vol. I, pp. 6, 13, 29; Ayodhya Kanda, vol. 2, pp. 141, 260, 266). ^‘’Uttara Kanda, vol. 3, p. 281. Kahahu bhagati patha kabana praydsd, Joga na makha japa tapa upabdsd / Sarala subhdba na mana kidUdi, Jathd Idbha santosa saddi //

It is stated elsewhere (pp. 326-28) in the same kanda that these are means for Kama-anurdga without which no one can achieve peace: ®Tt is stated in the Caitanya caritdmrita (Adi, chap. 9) of Krsnadasa Kaviraja that on one occasion Caitanyadeva exclaimed to Nityananda: “Blessed is my life for I am born in the holy land of ‘Bharat’. Do good to others and blessed be yourself.” Bharat bhdmite haila manusya janma sdr I Janma sdrthak. kari kara para iipakdr //

‘^J.N. Farquhar, An Outline of the Religious Literature of India, p. 330.

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Index

abhafig 209, 221

Abhayadevasuri 69 Abhinavagupta 328-29 Abul-Hussayn-al-Nuri 1 Abu Yazid 1-3 Acyutananda 235-36 Agamic worship 164 Agni 68 Akho, Akha Bhagat 101-2 Akka Mahadevi 14-15 Aksha>a Kumar Dutt 338, 348 Alakhnami 103 Alam Khan 225-26, 278 alekh piirusa 239

al-Ghazali 1 Ali al-Sindi 1-3 Ali al-Siraj 2-3 al-Hallaj 1-3

Ashraf Ali Thanwai 142 Asta Chapa 104 Ati-Bada sect 236 Atibadi 344 Auls 32 Avadhuti marga 27

Aziz Ahmad 137 Baba Caitanya 203, 208 Baba Farid, 76-81 Baba Yakut 210 Bajid Pathan 227 Baladeva 277 Baladeva Vidyabhusana 228 Balarama 181, 233, 235 Balarami sect 342-43 Bana 99 Banda Fakir 228

Allama Prabhu 203 Alvar 1, 11-14, 62, 149, 155, 172,174-

Ban^igopala 277

79, 183-84 Amar Das 41 Ambika 68

Basavesvara 203-4

bargita 264

Bauls 20, 32, 334, 338 Bayazid 1

Ananda Sampradaya 203, 211-12

Bepin Chandra Pal 349

Ananta 235 Ananta Caitanya 203 Ananta Kandali 248, 314 Anantananda 103

Bhadrabahu 69

Anantavarman Codaganga 232 Andm 1-2, 13-14, 176, 178

Bhagats 39 Bhagavandeva 277 Bhagavata Samprad%a 204, 233; piirdi.a and its influence 257, 261-64, 268, 274, 276-77, 292 Bhagavati 175-76

Ahgad 247 Aniruddha Dasa 243 Aniruddhadeva 295-308 Aniruddha Kayastha 245

bhakti, passim

Appar 188

Bhaktiratndkara 319-21; Bhakti ratndvali

Arjan, guru 37-39, 43 Arjunadeva 277

Bhagavat Misra 277-78 Bakhna 103-5

257, 261, 263, 268,277 Bhalan 99

Index

388 Chokha 207 Chuhungmung 247

Bhanudasa 207 Bharata 328 Bhaskafa 10 Bhattadeva 277-79, 283-84, 313-14 Bhatta Lollata 328 Bhattatiri M. Narayana 193

Damodariya sect 278, 288-90

Bhoja 330, 334 Bh'jdam 156

dasa bhakti 174-79; Jain 67

Dara Shikoh 141 Darpanarayani sect 344

Bhudattar 153

Bhudattalvar 153, 177 Bhudevi 165 Bhusana Dvija 243

Bhuttajvar 177 Bijoy Krishna Gosvamin 351-52 bodlucitta 27-28

Bodhisattva 71 Bopadeva 99 Braja-bhasa 99 Brahmabandhab Upadhyaya 348 Brahma 38, 50 brahman, passim

Brahma-sarnhati 267, 273, 288, 298, 312 Brahmo evangelism 348-54 Budhan 188 Buddhism 26-28, 54, 71 Bhushan Shah 229

Keshub's

Darvesh sect 337-38 Daspanchayatan 211 Datta Sampradaya 203 Dattatreya 201-3 Dayananda 349 Debendranath Tagore 347-48, 357 Devanandi69 Devchand 114-16, 119, 127-28 Dhananjaya 70 Dhanapala 69 Dharmaghosasuri 69 Dharmapala 349 DhuTNun 1 Digambara 70 dikpala-s 68

Caitanyadeva 47, 53, 61, 99, 100-10, 136, 149, 233-39, 248, 275-76, 325, 337-40, 343, 361, 363, 369; sects based on 5-7, 234-38, 325, 332-33, 337-43; social perspective of 315-23; evangalism

355-56; sect of Maharashtra 203 Cakradhara 99, 201-2 Calvin 47 Candidasa 1 Carpatinatha 26 Catuhsena-sarahati 288 Caturbhujadasa 104 Cauranginatha 233 Chahgadeva 201 Chirusseri 192 Chhatrasal Bundela 118-19, 123, 129 Chishti silsilah 75-76, 77, 79-81 Chitasvami 104

136-38 Daityari Thakur 243, 245 Damodaradeva 248, 267, 271-94, 312-13

Bhattoji D'ksitar 193

influence on

Dadu 22-25, 28-29, 34, 102-3, 113, 120,

Dirghatamas 58-59 Divakara 236 Durga 199, 273, 279 Dvija Sadananda 273-74 Eckhart 6, 8-9

60 Ekanainsa 233

eka-bhakti

Ekanatha 202, 205, 207-8, 215-16 Ekasaraniya religion 279 Ezhuthachan 192-94 Farid 74-82, 103, 137 Fuzeyl Ayyaz 1 Gahininatha 200 Ganesa 273 Gaudapada 111 Gaudiya Vaisnavism 326, 37, 361-62 Gauranga Prabhu 200, 203, 211; see also under Caitanyadeva

389

Index Gesu Daraz 203 Ghalib 81 Ghora Angirasa 271 Gobrai 344 God, passim Gommate^vara 73 Gopal Ata 298-99, 305, 312 Gopal Mi^ra Kaviratna 277-78 gopi-s 13-15, 39, 104, 107, 234

Gora 207 Gorakhpanthi 52-53 Goraksanatha 26, 53, 200, 202, 233

Ha 68 Isainaniyar 149

Islamic influence 98 Isvaradasa 235-36 Isvara Puri 316 lyarpagai 155 Jadumanideva 277 JagadHa Mi^ra 245-46 Jaganmohini sect 339 Jagannatha 232-37 Jainism 54, 62-73, 97-98

Govind 232; Govinda dasa 104

Jalaluddin Rumi 1,4-6, 142

Gujarat, bhakti movement 97-112 Guru Govind 41

Jami 5

Guruvayooappan 193-94

Janardana Svami 207, 216, 262

Janabai207 Jan Van Ruysbroeck 1,7-8

Hadi-pa 233 Hadrat Ibn Abbas 142

Jayadeva 1, 6, 38, 99, 233-34 Jayananda 315

Haribala sect 341-42 Haridasa 205, 326

Jayasi 120 Jayatilakasuri 69 Jesus Christ 7 Jilani 1

Haridas Ata 279 Haridasakuta 15

Jina 68, 69 Jinacandra 68

Haridasa Svami 104

Jinasena 68 Jinavallabha 69 JivaGosvami 15, 100, 326

Hajo Hayagriva Madhava 273, 275-76 Hanuman 178, 210, 365

Haridas Gusain 114 Harideva 248, 254, 267, 273, 276 Haridevi sect 288

Jivaiimukti

18, 25, 30-31,261-62

Harihara 188

Jnanadeva 199-201, 205-7, 215

Harihara Vipra 242

Joga Faramanand 207 Jvalamalini 68

Hathayoga 23, 25, 27-29, 32 Hazarati sect 344 Hazrat Ladley Mashykh 203 Hazrat Nizamuddin 215 Hemacandra 97 Hemadri 199

Kabir 17, 20-26, 28-29, 31-34, 38, 41, 47,. 53-54, 80, 98, 103, 113, 116, 120,13031, 136-37,244,248,369; panthi 51, 53

Hema Sarasvati 242

Kakabhusundi 360, 366

Henry Suso 1, 8-10

Kalamukha 168, 182

Hindu-Muslim unity 122-24

Kala Sarnhati 288, 298-99, 303-4, 313

Hita Harivarn^a 104 Hujw’ri 3-4

Kali 279, 289 Kamakhya 274, 279, 310

Husain Ambar Khan 221

Kamal 137 Kanakalata 254 Kanci Khuntia 237

incarnation theory 260-61 Ilaiyankudi 155

Kanhopatra 207

Indra 58, 60, 68, 163

Kanhupa 233

Index

390 Kankadasa 15 Kanphata Yogis 20, 201 Kapalika 168 Kapiladeva 278 Kapilendra 232-33 Karaikkal Ammaiyar 149-61,188

Madhavendra Puri 316 Madhavi Dasi 237 Madhurakavi 177 madhura-bhdva 60-61, 99, 325-26

Madhvacarya 15, 62, 244, 361, 363

Kartabhaja 333, 340-41

Mahavira 63-66 Mahanubhava sect 99, 201-2, 224

Kanina 27-28

mahdsukha 21, 24, 27-28, 30-31

Ka^i Mi^ra 233, 237 Kavi Karnapura 235, 316 kdya-sadhana 25, 27

Mahatma Gandhi 101 Mahipati 208, 227, 230

Kazi Kadam 103 Kazi Mohammad 103 Kechaikhati 310 Kesava Caitanya 203 Ke^ava Hrdayarama 99 Ke^avasvami 227-28 Keshub Chandra Sen 348-56 Khandoba 199-200 Khusi Bisvasi sect 339 Klrtana 234-35, 257, 260, 266, 281 Krsna, passim Kr?nadasa 104,106 Krsnadasa Kaviraja 315-16, 322, 326, 333 Kubera 68 Kula^ekhara 1,11-12, 177 Kumbhandasa 104 Kunvarbai 107-8 Kurooramma 195 Kutban 120 laksanas 63-64, 7 0

Laksmi 14 Laldasa 103 Latif 43 Latif Shah 226-27

Mammata 329 Mamu Thakura 237 Manatunga 70 Manekbai 107 Mangaiyarkkara^iyar 149 Manikkavacagar 184 Manjhan 120 Manoharadeva 277 Manu 189 Matak community 303, 305, 308 Mathurad^sa Ata 312 Matsyendranatha 24, 233 Maulana Minhajuddin 76 Mayamara, Moamaria 298-300, 302-8, 312 Mayon 163, 165, 176 Mazhabis 55 Muhammad Bakhtiyar Kaki 75-76 Meykandar 184, 188 Mihraj 128, 135 M'rabai 2,99-100, 110-11, 120 monism 257-58, 262 Moropant 227-28, 230 Mudal Alvar 155, 188 Muhammad, prophet 139 Muhammad 38, 74, 93-94

Lingayata 98, 203-4

Muhasibi Dhul-Nun 1

Locana Dasa 315 Luipa 233 Luther 47

Muktabai 201, 207 Mukundadasa Gosvamin 334

Madhavadeva 247, 254, 256, 259, 261,

Muruga 163, 165, 181

Mukundaraja 200 Murari Gupta 315, 321

266-68, 277, 287, 298, 301, 305, 307, 312-13 Madhava Kandali 242 Madhava Pattanayaka 237 Madhavendra 234

Nage^a Sampradaya 204 Nairiti 68 Nakar 99 Nakkirar 188

391

Index

Namadeva, Namdev 20, 39, 47, 80, 102- Patbausi Satra 277-79, 284 Pattinattar 185 3, 205-7, 215 Paygai 177,188 Namaghosa 266, 268, 277 Periyalvar 1, 12-13, 176, 188 Namghar 265-66, 278, 306-7 Pey-alvar 11, 155, 177, 188 Nammalvar 14, 172, 177, 185, 188 Nanak 17-25, 28-34, 36-41,43-45, 47-56, Pipa 102 74, 78, 80, 113, 116, 120, 130-31, 136- Pitambara Dasa 333 Pitambara Siddhantavagisa 314 37, 247, 369 Poygai-alvar 11, 155, 188 Nandadasa 104, 120 Polytheism 295-96 Nandisvara 67 Poonthanam Namboodiri 194-95 Naqshbandi 76 popular language 54-55 Ndrada Sutras 317-18 prajna 27-28 Narahari 207 Pradyumna Mi^ra Til Narasimha Mehta 99-102, 106-12 prakrti-bhajana 338-39 Narayana 257-58, 260-61 Pranami sect 113-46 Narayanadeva 277 Prannath 113-46 Narayanaguru 193 Prarthana Samaj 205 Narayana Thakur 247-48 Prataparudra 235-27 Narayani 174-76, 183 Premananda 101 Nathasect 23-29, 34, 52-57, 236 Pratap Majumdar 353-53 Nathamuni 11 Pudam-alvar 11 Nathapanthi 20, 200-2, 233 Nayanmars 149,155,158, 160, 182, 184- Punidavati 150-52 Purandaradasa 15 85,189 Purnabodha Svam? 228 "Nika Samhati 288, 298, 312 purusartha 60 Nimbarka 10,14, 62, 234, 244 Purusa Samhati 267, 288, 298, 312 Nirguna Sampradaya 23 Purusottama Vidyavagi^a 314 Nityananda 337 Nityanandadeva 307 Qadiri 76 Nivrttinatha 200, 207 Nrsimha 175-76 Rabia 1-2 Nrsimha Sarasvati 202-3, 216 Rabindranath Tagore 32, 349 Radha 4, 14, 34, 307, 315-16, 331-32, Origin, father 7 338-45; cult 104; concept of 234-35, Padma Ata 312 Padmavati 68 PSgalnathi sect 344 Pancadevata 273 Pancaratrika 175 Pandharpur movement 204 Paramananda 277 Paramananda Dasa 104 Paramananda Mahapatra 237 Paramananda Sen 315-17 ParSva 69 Pasupata 168, 182

239 Radhavallabha sect 117, 127-28, 135 Raghava Caitanya 203 Rama 12, 21-22, 38, 50-51,99, 103, 175, 178, 209-10,277. 296, 359-60, 363, 367 Ramavallabhi sect 341 Rdmacaritaindnasa; bhakti concept in 359-70 Ramadasa 119, 209-12, 230 Ramalihga 185 Ramananda 20, 38, 47, 53, 62, 80, 98, 99, 103

392

Index

Saral'a Dasa 233' Sarvabhauma 235 saheakra 22-23, 27 Sathakopa 14 satnam 36 Sattra 265-66, 268, 277-78, 286, 289-90„ 301-3, 305-6, 311 Satvata 175 Satyendranath Tagore 348 SSyana 59, 61 Syed Ashraf Jahangir Samnani 87-95 Sekkilar 154, 182, 183 Sena 207 sexo-yogic practices 25-28 Shah Muni 223-24 Shah Muntoji Bahamani 219-21, 230 Shah Navrang 228 saccidananda-vigraha 276 Shivaji 210-11, 215 Sadhvini 344 Siddhacaryas 23,233 Sahajiya 5-6, 32; concept of 17-34; Siddha philosophy 161, 185 Buddhism 20, 23, 26, 30; kdya 27; mahdsukha 27; Vaisnavism 20, 61, Siddhasena Divakara 70 Siddhayika 68 333-34, 338, 345 Sikhi Mohanti 237 Sahebdhani sect 339-40 Sipivista 59 Sahlaji 2-3 Sisu sect 236 Saidu Lai 228 Sitanath Yattrabhusan 348 Saiva Siddhanta 155-56, 184, 189 gaivism 68,164-65, 167-69, 170-73, 182- Siva 25-26, 38, 50, 68, 149-60, 181, 183,. 273,289, 367 85, 187-90 Sivanath Sastri 349, 353 saklii-bhdva 115 Shaikh Abdur Razzaq Kashani 87 Sakhibhavaka sect 343-44 Shaikh Abu Sa’id Khirraz 144 Sakhubai 207 Sakti worship 25-26, 120, 199, 233, Shaikh Alauddin 203 Shaikh Bahawad 103 273-74, 279, 289, 310 Shaikh Farid 103, 137 Samantabhadra 65, 70 Shaikh Moinuddin Chishtti 75, 76, 81 Samayacaryas 188 Shaikh Md. Shrigondekar 217-19, 228,. Sambandar 153,184, 188 Sanatana Gosvami 15, 100, 326, 334, 230 337-38 Shaikh Nizamuddin Auliya 1, 79, 81,. Sdndilva Sutras 319-20 88-89 Sankaracarya 1-2, 10, 62, 193, 200, 257 Shaikh Nasiruddin ChiragDehlvi 82, 88Sahkaradeva 47, 242-56, 273-77, 287-88, Shaikh Sahabuddin 203 297-301, 305, 307, 310-11 Shaikh Sali Muhammad 228 Sankara Pandita 237 Shaikh Sultan 222-23 Sahkar5aria 233 Skanda 163 Santabhusana 277 Somadevasuri 67-68 Santinatha 67 Sopana Deva 207 Sant tradition 24, 47-49, 52 Sri 14, 165

Ramananda Raya 234-35, 237-38, 322 Ramanuja 1, 10-11, 14-15, 62, 171-72, 188-89, 232-33, 244, 257 Rama Sarasvati 314 Ramdasia 55 Rammohun Roy 346-47 rasa, types of 7: problem 327-36 rasalila 107, 115, 143, 239 Rasik Murari 258 Ratbhikhari sect 342 Ravidasa, Raidas 98, 113, 120 Rhenish mystics 7 Rsabha 64, 71 Rudra Sarnhati 288 Rupa Gosvami 7, 15, 100, 315, 325-36

393

Index Snbhatta 104

Tulasi Mi^ra 237

Sridharasvami 257

Tulja Bhavani 210-11

^ripada Raja 15 §ri Ram Ata 298 Sriraiiga 176, 178,182 §ri-Vaisnavism 155, 184, 189'90 St. Augustine 7 St. Bernard 1, 6-7, 9-10 St. Catherine 1 St. Francis 1 St. Gregory 7 St. Yeresa 2 Subhadra 233 Subrahmanya 163 Suddhadvaita 104 Suharwardia sect 76,137-38 Sufism 1-6, 20-21, 54-51,57,74-76,83

Uddhav Cidghana 227-28 UjjvalanUamani 325-36 ulta-sddhand 25 ultimate reality 17, 24, 27, 33, 54 Unitarianism 350 updya 27-28 Vadakalai 189-90 Vaikuntha 60 Vaisnavism, passim Vakresvara Pandita 237 Vallabhacarya 53, 99, 103, 257 Vamadeva 68 Vamana 175-76

Sundaramurti 153

Varuna 60, 68 Vasistha 58-59 Vasudeva 175-76, 233

Sundarsath 124-25

Vattakera 63

^unyata 2'l-2?i Surdasa 104, 120

Vayu 68 Vedanta Sabha 348

Surya 273 svakiva-parakiyd 332-34

Vendan 163 Venmony school 196

87,136-37, 139-46

Svetambara 70

Videhamiikti 261-62

Svapne^vara 237 Syamananda 238

Vidyanandin 63

Syed Husain 228 Syed Muhammad 228

Vidyapati 1,234 Viraja 273 Vilvamahgalam Svamiyar 195 Vimala 233

Tantipa 233 Tantric schools 295

Virakari 99 Virasaivism 98, 203-4

Teg Bahadur 37, 41 Temple, role of 166,169-70; prostitution

Visnu, passim

in 200 Tenkalai 184, 190

Visnudasa 326 Vitthala 104, 202-5, 209 Vivekananda 323, 348-49

Thomas A. Kempis 1

Vrndavana Dasa 315-17

Tilakdasi sect 344

Vyasaraya 15

Tirthahkara 63-70, 71 Tirumalisai 177-78 Tirumahgai 11, 176-77, 188 Tirunevukkara^ar 153 Tiruppan 172, 177 Tondaradippodi 177 Trimurti 272 Tukaram 201-2, 205, 208-9, 215 Tulasidasa 26, 104, 120, 359-70

Warkari sect 202, 204-5, 209, 211, 224 Wadwal Siddha NaganSth 204, 228 Yajnanarayana Diksitar 193 Yama 68 Yamunacarya 1, H Yaiovanta 235 Yayati Ke^ari 232

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